Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN)

 - Class of 1947

Page 1 of 132

 

Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection, 1947 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1947 Edition, Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collectionPage 7, 1947 Edition, Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection
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Page 10, 1947 Edition, Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collectionPage 11, 1947 Edition, Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection
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Page 14, 1947 Edition, Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collectionPage 15, 1947 Edition, Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection
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Page 8, 1947 Edition, Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collectionPage 9, 1947 Edition, Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 132 of the 1947 volume:

-4- un , x PL: v-,Ai T' n-K 194 RG SS In ,gulf-'f ' ' , -- 4-I L- 1 A .1 I' ' a ny- ' 'WI L IV' f,,, A J? 52 In-. 1 'foffyfg . ,gf , 'fl ' If I Jvv . pf- ,I5,:'lX N I I ,L , .Y .1 .. If .af I K'-. .f' .1 Ny.. Gut reoorel of a BIG YEARS events at Kokomo High School . . Kokomo, Indiana TED TEEGARDEN, WILLIAM BUGHER, Edifor-in-Chief Business Manager NANCY ADAMS, CLARA EMILY CLIFFORD, Associafe Edifor Assocfafe Business Manager Bircl's eye View of Kolcomo . . . and Kokomo l-ligh School. Looks small from here buf il's a preffv im- porlanlr place when you come figh+ down lo I+. --Couriesy of WKMO Page 2 1 f 1 Rf, W' MAJ' J. 5 5 ' A- l AT THE CORNER OF SUPERIOR A D LAFONTAINE fy' A+ +he corner of Superior and Lafon- faine . . . Jrhe number one spol in our lives. Why shouldnur il be? ll's 1'he corner where KI-iS has sfood as long as we can remember . . . ihe corner where we've been com- ing +he lasl four years 'rooblain an educaiion from +ha+ same Kokomo High School. Somelhing new has been added rhis year 'ro ihe old corner so familiar lo us. The sec- lion of Lafonraine Slreel running pas'r The school has been complelely modernized and we now have a new approach lo our favoriie corner. We've passed lhis corner plen'ry of limes . . . on our way lo and from fhe grid games ar Kaulz Field and as we mei our friends ai 'rhe signpost Allin all, 'rhis corner has played a big parl in our lives. HK . IS KOKUMO HIGH SCHOOL Take a good look aT This building you see before you. IT has been The cenTer oT The lasT Tour . . . and very imporTanT . . . years oT our lives. YeT iT's noT iusT This brick sTrucTure ThaT repre- senTs Kokomo l-ligh School To us. His a loT more Than ThaT. Our Triends ThaT we have made while here . . . The ones who walked Through The same halls, aTTended The same classes, cheered aT The same TooTball games wiTh us . . . have added ThaT exTra sorneThing. A combinaTion oT boTh These vi+aI TacTors . . . The building plus Those we have known in iT . . . con- sTiTuTes whaT we know now, and will never TorgeT as Kokomo l-ligh School. fm V as , in fi, N. 5 , Q 3,1 ' .Ik . ,mi QA Q, k,,V -N f , f H f?,s,: ,,. 5 .g , Q, Q - W -: ywwwf. . ww-wave-vm s.+A.:.v,.,M. 1 . ,. H - . 1 Wyhh L , W 1 L Q? L L f Y - K . V 'awww 4 ...QNm.-Q f-wniuniu.-.aer'nfad!llaAlNlv1vlDnBK A. ,, W K M Q . A 4 f , ' -J.-my-w..... W- WM- M --., if A VX , 21? f 4? b ggqa g '- ' ' ' A . ' ' f R' ' -x :, ., ..-M... 'flkffzvs dw ,. f 6 x - 'if if . A . mf f ' -Q I,g.,,f:f-t,ifyxsffA, I , Q 5 fjw- V L11 V5 ,X t ' ffifil 1 ., 1 ' P ' 191.14 S f-fgzgigf , 'fwf:sfLf-,g- v - -fe-.fQ,L f , L , ' 'MW' ' 'L ' - , k , ,gil , Q, E ,gs,Qs2j.z?EWi'z',b . 4 -f M - ' - ' b 7' . , A .,.-,,,..,...,? ,.,, W, -- h,2W:X,.,k. . , , 1 . . Q , . , , , .. ., - ,, 'fz 555555 1 ' - ,Mem Q 1 ' 'ww-7-w+-1 wwywe-2, :-wwf., NWN f f. :. pe ,w.,NfW . , ,g,-Mm: f wx 6 , 1 . Viv K ' - vmmfg 'L M K . -f . ,. , W Q ,., V . A ,V ,v.. w ' ' , ,fix P A , W . 5 - , ess. : K 71' .. Y Y, ' '1' -' MT Q Ds. f,,,,- -K A hflfgy, W' .Jimi , . Q? QQ f- ' WM . M EM L ig A 5 , Q . fw fQ,.iw?f75i 'L' 31 lgf . ?j: ,, ,i ae,l.Ll :,x5,v.i'E5, I . W 6 I ai. WW' K ss Q X '. ' . 2,92-EQKNS i :Wig ' - f 'Q ' f -ff ? H f Q L, L ' 2 'if N A' 5 K 1 an - gg Q ' ' Xi if 'L u 4' - - , fi , -Q, ' 'L ' ,, is K 'P . Fwwir-www v . wi..-' wi - fr 54:5 24,5 .. ...,,.. . ,M im Qs ,Q 1 Sinn if K 53144 k up--sv ' h , , 5,5 .wvfssfw , , , ' , ,, ,,, ,,, , Q1 -5. ., , 9 . , , ,,, . mf ,J , X5 A Q M li . ' ',,, ,,,,, , ,,,, ,,,,. A , , ' , , , ,,,,,,, ,,, , ,. ,,, ., ,,,, , A ' -r M,,,,,B 'H' .NMMA Page 6 '31 wr llgil y lm, , ll I 'W l X il ' I! WFT 'W' z- v ,gt i., v'n,fglr'1 gixzrrqd i 4 M587 Q fr nr Quin, 5 insular- wi i li il - F .8 ibut . U . 'J 4 S9 f,l'1fiaLil'cg45KH-igiigill 'E l' ' if ,'! flfli, lin if -i X' ,ill 'l :na y Ar v -win i Tim flfwmis il ' ifllhlz i- .-fl V lr -.Nz-tif Il X 1 1,1 M ,,'. li .. AN :alfalfa - f -he ii, ,.' 'A' V time .1lai:s'H:laf'l i-1 1 'W 1 -!s:sssi.i.s-zu 1, Iii - Nl . I Mn 41,1 V11 'M ,Y X YQ' jy'Q.g.v?MF 4E1i.VI.??f?.:.' 4 l f? evil fig. L4 NLS., Y Xt ii V flyxl I, iyfhl 1 1, ' ,I , r g E 'film ifigri lily If! . g f Xp X 4' 'Ml Q. V V1 y 'lb if, gkuld .x X ' X gulf . ,iii ,li A y' jg ,Ni I 4.V.' ' ' - W 1 i V 'Q A V' i -E , 1 A E E ' i v x -i Mliillilz X l f ,fi-rf' Q 7F5j.5!:535.S!l!, V N9. ' Wllljil. ' ' . . 1'S!?.:+f. . lflml lYfSi!l!!!f?f'!?...isssJll!.'!llH5!'ll!?l55l!!'!L ll Ell1?llF WHERE IN 19417, FOURTEEN HUNDRED OF US . Fourleen hundred sludenls . . . four- leen hundred friends all wilh one purpose . . . 'lo learn lor living: nol iusl lor now, nol jus? for len, lwenly, or filly years from now. loul for any lime lhal knowledge will be necessary for us lo live as good cilizens in lhe world lhal we are enlering as lhe men and women of lomorrow. Some of our lourleen hundred are pre- paring for lhe laclories, lhe workshops and +he laboralories of induslry. Yel, lhere are many who are using Kl-IS as lhe cornerslone of lheir educalion, for lhey will conlinue on lo college and specialized sludy. ll 's nol hard lo lell lhal we, as a group. represenl many varied inleresls and will cer- lainly lravel many varied roads ol lile. Nev- erlheless, we don'l lhinlc of ourselves as in- dividuals. Using lhe geomelric lheorem lhal The whole ol a quanlily is grealer lhan any ol ils paris, we realize lhal' lhe sum rolal of l4OO is really The imporlanl laclor. H? 'O p..-ein., ' VL- iv' I-.llliiaff-21' il - f 2. A 9 I 41 K Vik 0 5 . REALLY HAD A GREAT YEAR! Page 8 All off . . . for anofher dey al' KHS . . . anolller dey of our big year. This year demanded our deepest concenfraiion and . . . oh well, sleep helps, +oo. ,W Anal a year we'll never for- get Wasn'+ H rhe year we 'roolc 1'l'1e New Year's Day Tourney, The year we had an all-round g re a+ lime, ancl, mosr imporlanl, wasn'+ '47 OUR year? 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I' 5, f ' fiii5'?,'ff'15f1 EHR, Q94 W 5- w , , I, ' mimi,f315-iw.aniw-wsS4iziuiZ h , ., , - ff5WV?i,M?17'91252'-5232?T'11i'1:Lfffir'Sffs- 'tvfiif - . f 1 fy-4 - . f 2 353 'fir vpfgpiwqx., fgm.1Ffs1f1ggf?:esmxiii iwswliyf- li2LS'5:X 'f f ' :sy -3f.,-,1z- ...., ff .ty 5,M,w1,kt,Qg..z.Lf.Mq nfl wgzh ., - -5 1 . 51, -.,f ,W , f ::1243,l2y,.'z1. y' e 1f?'www1.L12M3nS?si2'fNy.1 ' 1,i52rx,1.z .25 fi W 'ye 1-1: - Y. 1. 'img wgqwe if 1,f,,,a,' 1 v xlN33'Qf3JC3fwS 'I 5 ' .- ' QL ,wffw Li K7 ffilpifleggggwgfggggwisfs'Q5 if s L i - 5. I- - V X ww1'x3Qsf,'b,gi,-1,1f,- ,. -, , 1.-f ir f V qammffsilml -. ' ' TK21-'fmffifmkl 'A Y' ' ' 1 ' ff?,iii-XPakwif1i .55f151221 'gyggj 1. 'EFF' ' ' VN S A 4 . k ' iw : if f::m5 55iiiz'5if,?-iw Z., , 333 Ki: S , A A isj:5f:Li1:MT wg 723 2 .i,:,1f- ,,, 1 ,,. E , -Q nf, . ,Q fww, . L., -lv' 'Vi ZR, k . ,. 4.1 . , X2 I' 2 'wie ,ia if F Q 1, ' , : iff ' Q35 f. 5 W ' w -,QQ N, . LX Qiigpg, Q E . P' 1 , Q...-Q , 4 yi X Qi- 544 k 3 ' 1 ' QSM 35? 's ' A i mil I r A M , g 2 f' K f ff A . Pi, ,Nw ' A W , K -wiv! 'E 1- .. ' 4 7' :i 4 rg , - 3 ',...-nw 4 p 3 Uh. 4 4 r . 4 5 .nu Y 4 , M. 5 351: ii 2 is? www 5 A V gi i 'E fi . 3 K K 9 fa g. :K 'Kg x , .. iw B I xr E Si S ,N . 5 X , 'wink . 9 N . ..-QQ' .X , .am , wvpm, L .1 Q.. K 4 Www Page 17 Guy New Hoosier Selioo master We Seniors oi IQ47 consider il a privi- lege lo be llwe iirsl class lo qraduale under our new Superinlendenl, Mr. Q. lvl. Swiliarl. Mr. Swilwarl came lo us irom Riclimond, ln- diana, as a well qualified educalor. Cfvradunling from Riclfiland Cenler High and Indiana Uniyersily, lie began liis leacnf ing :gr reer as rnasler oi a oneeroom sclwool liouse in Fulien Counly in IQI6. llirougli luis lorql -Nnrll ani enlliusiasm ior educalion, lie li in Qqlablislwed an enviable repuinlion ag one oi llie 'pulgilandinq sclwool men in ln- eliana. Mr. Swilnarl possesses rlwal qualily or neigliborly iriendliness wliicli malces liim a D 8 llworouqlily well-lilced member of llie powers llial be. I lilqe llwe people of Kolcorno and llweir proqressiye spirilf' lie mainlains, 'land l liope lliey will learn lo lilce me. logellwer, we can go lo new lieiqlils in modern educa- ,- ii ,,.,- licii. As Superinlendenl, Mr. Swiliarl is assisr- eel in llwe iormalion ol our scliool policies by llne Scliool Board, wlniclw is elecled by llie . Ly Council. VV'el'iopell1all1el'iaslound us all co-op- erii lixe in lliis, liis iirsl year in Kolcomo, and we pledge our conlinual assislance in lasks f.'i':,-izqlioul llie coming years lo Mr. Swiliarl. A s+uden+ consulls Principal C. E. Hinshaw. F1 1 o llle Gulc 111g Hamel ol K Mr. C. E. l-linshaw has given us palienl Many are lhe burdens 'ihal lall upon hi, and dependable guidance lhroughoul his palpable shoulders since he is The person mosf lhirly-lwo years as principal ol Kl-IS. iagjafisilale lor The high school and, conse- The School Board meels wilh Mr. Swiharl lwice a monlh. qiensily . . . us. Fxlihough he is l4epl busy wilh ada rninislralive dulies. lvlr. l-linshaw linds lime lo meel ire- quenlly wilh leach- ers, pupils, and slu- denl orqanizalions. Leif fo fighir Mr. Claude M. Job, Sccf amy: Mr. 0. i-4. Swiharlq mfs. w.snii.1 Hughes, president Mr. Ed- ward Kaegi, ireasurer. Page 10 lclilliilg 011 Six ollices slancl oul as being ime porlanl cogs in lhe Kokomo Public School syslem. lzirsl on lhe lisl is lhe ollice ai Superinlendenl ol Public Schools. This deparlmenl has charge ol linancial mailers and lakes care oi clerical work lor lhe Kokomo school syslem. The Principals ollice ol Kokomo l-ligh School makes oul programs lor sluclenls. checks absenlees. and keeps recorols ol each sluclenl. The Vocalional Deparlmenl, under The clireclion oi Mr. Virgil lzleenor, oversees lhe woodshop, machine shops, raclio oeparlmeni, auio mechanics, and lk if YK Top: Mrs. Rozella Finch, Mrs. Rulh Wickersham, Mrs. Blanche Jay, and Miss Belly Oilar handle innum- erable delails in lhe Superinlendenfs office. Middle: Miss Neva Bourne shows Miss Mildred Ellars fhe afhlelic eligibilily blanks for high-school slu- denfs. Bofiom: Vocafional Direcfor Virgil Fleenor diclaies a leller lo Miss Norma Hamler. Page 20 1 f, ,mg sz w 4 Q Q +5 3555 1-'vm f 6 V .SEQ ', wi - z xf 5H'4sM.ff H252 . ff 4 ,. . :tif 'z Q W fy K :- 5 '5 3 :L a ep ff'.:e:i-'I-xxf: i wgf ' ' ' wi ,L Shag, 4, , . W , z , ,.,, .. ! by v 'E ff 1' ,, X. 5 ff A ' Q' :-. in Q ,JG .ff , c ,nm ig i - 1 6 A ,gal 4 - ' x .. ' WM, 03-ff 'O f wwbngw A Qing., T., Q49-O .,-- 4.1, 'o wa' ww 3J.fM -'7 ' X ?f T be T.-93 , ffff ..m '-- -, ,,.. ...P ,M Wu TT' yfilfvkge -Soo' ' 5N:v,, f7 Xi? X9 VY I f .fr T54 wg faq W Qc .I gxx as - QQ - '3 x x .L Z A g A 1- . TQ, - ' X 1 'Q-. I .V XA g H, af' Dig: ' N nr crohy C lpn niiufurlurilg rumpletvh th: qouru nf it-any prurribrh by the ionrh MW! Q ' of 'Ehurnkiun for the 'High School mb in therefore mtiileh to Win I Q 31 -f CQ., 1- - .44 , T ilil9l31ll'! 'f1Uf 'ai if no nl Ioiomajuhinvax. this seventeen! bug of Ihnnarg. Aj. LIA7. Juv V r . H M, .. 1 ., gf s eg, 4. 4....... -.1-4 Fra - xx X .X 9' A if '91-V' '- QD f ? IT SEEMS A MATTER OF FORM A maTTer oT Torm? Sure iT is. Don'T lef This hodgepodge oT Torms, lolanlcs, and cards inTluence you as To how our school works. Sure, we're each only one ouT oT I4OO buT remember ThaT diplomas are handed ouT one aT a Time. EducaTion Tor The masses is a greaT Theory, buT iT doesn'T worlc ThaT way aT Kl-lS. We enTer high school as a group, buT The group idea sTops There. ln oTher words we are herded in and singled ouT, so To spealc. ThaT's The big dif- Terence. OT course we admiT ThaT we are poured inTo a mold . . . ThaT oT The good Ameri- Page 22 can ciTizen . . . buT we, as individuals don'T come ouT in exacTly The same paTTerri. lT's all The same wheTher iT is an English class, The STardusT Ball, or The KaTs baslceT- ball Team: a group oT individuals ThaT do The same Things in diTTerenT ways. 'l'haT's where The individualiTy comes in. Each one oT us can Tlunlc The class, make mincemeaT ouT oT our daTe's shoes aT The dance, or miss The shoT in The baslceTball game. Then again we can malce The l-lonor Role. do our dancing on The Tloor exclusively, or be high scorer oT The game. Good or bad, iT's all up To us. AT any raTe, you may be sure ThaT iT is purely an in- dividual maTTer. Q. Qur LTCEIHS POi1'ltCCl lIlflC Way LlL7W11 Coming To Kl-TS vviTh a Ph. B. Trom Ripon College, Miss EsTella Pearce as Dean oT Girls, immediaTely saw The need Tor an or- ganizaTion in which all girls could geT To lcnow each oTher beTTer, so she Tormed The Girls' League in IQ36. When girls enTer as Treshmeni she wel- comes each and every one To an individual conTierence To give Them an idea oT whaT is expecTed oT Them during Their years in high school and To help Them become adiusTed To Their new surroundings and acTiviTies. Miss Pearce's Typical day is an exhausT- ing one. The TirsT TorTy-Tive rninuTes she ge 24 spends signing absence slips, and she Teaches a healTh class The Third period. The remaining parT oT The day she is occupied wiTh inTerviews, Teachers' conTerences, and oTher Tasks arising in a Dean's day. Believing ThaT all work and no play malces Jill a dull girl, Miss Pearce Tinds Time To garden, raise caTs, and go Tishing. We appreciaTe everyThing Miss Pearce has done in helping us develop our char- acTers. l-ler wise advice and Triendly per- sonaliTy have won her a secure niche in The hearTs oT us all. Mr. J. P. Jones has been Dean oT Boys aT Kl-IS Tor The pasT nine years. The goaTience and general undersTanding he has displayed in his dealings wiTh ThaT complex mechanism . . . The boy . . . is known and appreciaTed by all Those who have come in conTacT wiTh him. STricTly a rnan's man, Dean Jones was a well-lcnown baslceTball sTar in a region where This sporT reigns supreme . . . Indiana. AT BuTler UniversiTy, while working Tor his AB. and A.lv1. degrees, Diz, as he was called by all his Triends. was chosen as an All-Ameri- can CenTer in baslceTball. Since he came To Kl-TS in T93 I, Mr. Jones has TaughT physical educaTion, maThe- maTics, and has assisTed in coaching our bas- lceTball Teams To Their yicTories. When The AdminisTraTion decided To creaTe The oTTice oT Dean oT Boys, Mr. Jones was selecTed Tor This posiTion. As parT oT his worlc wiTh boys. Mr. Jones creaTed The Boys' Legion, which has accom- plished greaT Things under his supervision. lT's noT hard aT all Tor us To realize The debT oT graTiTude ThaT we in general and The boys in parTicular owe To Dean Jones. Tlle road To TuT:u1'e success as X Dean J. P. Jones. Pc wc VVIGHTI cc w1Tl1 The NDELITQ Ages,n l While I947 was a greaT year Tor us, iT was also a rnomenTous year Tor The enTire world. AT- Ter several years oT war, The TighTing counTries had Tinally ceased To Tire Their guns. This was broughT home To use more clearly by The Social STudies DeparTmenT, which was supervised by Miss Gerlrrude ColescoTT. While deeply engrossed in pasT world aT- Tairs, we did noT allow up-To-daTe happenings To pass by unnoTiced. We lcepT accuraTe Track oT presenT Times by our sTudies in currenT evenTs. Our excursions inTo AncienT, World, and UniT- ed STaTes l-lisTory, Government and Sociology Top: Mr. Joseph Powell and Miss GerTrude ColescoTT. Middle: Mr. J. Warren Muncie and Mr. ForresT Roe. BoTTom: Hisfory sTudenTs learn aboul' The STaTe LegIslaTure. Boer War, and maTTers historical. Mr. E. W. Phillips, Miss Elizabelh Mc- lnfosh, and Mr. Earl Wilson. Mr. CurTis Lesier, Mr. Earl UTTerback, and Mr. Fred Muslard. did much To make us realize our sTakes . . and possible misTakes . . . in The TuTure. ln order To obTain a workable know-how oT The naTional, sTaTe, and local governmenT, The hisToryclasses sponsored a mock elecTion which was held ThroughouT The school This year. Sample balloTs were used, voTing booThs esTablished, compleTely equipped wiTh elecTion boards and all The regular poli- Tical paraphernalia. In co-operaTion wiTh The Visual EducaTion DeparTmenT. many inTeresTing Tilms were shown To The various hisTory classes This year To enable hisTory sTudenTs To learn The TacTs by seeing Them insTead oT iusT reading Them as was done beTore This deparTmenT was es- fablished. A special course included in Social STud- ies was Sociology which has been a parT oT our curricula since I943. Being The sTudy oT human relaTions, problems oT marriage, Ti- nance, personaliTy, and sTraighT Thinking were discussed. OTher problems such as ju- venile delinguenTs, alcoholics, and Teeble- minded people were also discussed. We realize how imporTanT The sTudy oT humaniTy and governmenT is in preparing us To sTep inTo our posiTions in The world as successiul, law-abiding ciTizens. Pug 7 ge 28 Learning To minr our business, Under The supervision oT Mr. Russell BraTTon, and six oTher Teachers, sTudenTs were Trained Tor TuTure posiTions in The bookkeeping and secreTarial Tields. Mr. George C. Dunbar reTurned Trom- The service This year To resume his work in The Commercial DeparTmenT. Each sTudenT in This course musT Take aT leasT one year oT bookkeeping and one- halT year oT Typing. l-le Then chooses one oT Two branches . . . The bookkeeping or The sTenographic. While shorThand sTudenTs Try To mem- orize Their brieT Torms and Take dicTaTion, The bookkeeping sTudenTs sTruggle To make Their accounTs balance. STudenTs who Took oTTice pracTice obTained a knowledge oT The oTTice machines: The adding machine, compTomeTer, calcula- Tor, and The ediphone. There were several addiTional sub- iecTs oTTered: such as Salesmanship, Busi- ness Law, Business English, and Business MaTh. An ouTsTanding proiecT, con- ducTed by The Commercial DeparTmenT, was an occupaTional survey oT Kokomo. The purpose oT The survey was To Tind ouT where The demand Tor parTicualr posiTions was, and To see if Kl-IS was Teaching sTu- denTs The subiecTs They would need in laTer liTe. ATTer The indusTrious sTudenTs com- pleTe Their Training, They are ready To Take Their posiTions in The business world oT Tomorrow. Top: Typisfs learn correcT form Tor business leTTers. Middle: Mr. Earl James, Mrs. Isabella Legg, and Mr. Ken- neTh WarThen. BoTTom: Mr. George C. Dunbar, Miss Vedah Covalf, and Mr. Russell BraTTon. an probe scientific Wonclers, We Law of inerfia, Wingspan, H2 02, and dissecfion of frogs represenf physics, aero- naufics, chemisfry, and biology in fhaf order. These subiecfs, which form fhe Science De- parfmenf of KHS, are fhe reasons for fhe mixing of quanfifies lknown and unlcnownl ir fhe chemisfry lab, fhe possession of fhe for- maldehyde fingers of fhe biology clissec- fion crews, and fha inquisifiye acfions of fha fufure physicisfs who feel fhaf fhey musf examine everyfhing scienfific. Bofh fheory and pracfical applicafion of aeronaufics are faughf in a way so fhaf fhe sfuclenf learns fhe problems of fhe clesigner as well as of fhe operafor of an airship. The valuable lessons learned in fhese subiecfs are direcfly applicable fo our lafer life. B low: In chemisfry sfudenfs fesi' fheories Upper righf: Mr. Barclay D. Morris, Mr. Lower righf: Mr. Waller Cross and M in purifying gaseous produds. Haven Jones, and Mr. Lesfer McCarfy. Olin Meriff. Fog realized that a nluocly lJeauTliTuln .- iff... 'j Q ,. K A ',' A 4, l -4 nw . ,iv ig, I i V' 'i-l. I r'u Fge 30 AlThough our high school is generally Thoughf oT as a brain building insTiTuTion, iT is prompTly learned upon arrival aT Ki-TS ThaT physical condiTion is placed on a deTiniTe par wiTh menTaliTy. Considering Th i s T The Physical EducaTion DeparT- menT, under The direcTion oT Mr. ChesTer l-Till, has done iTs job well in condi- Tioning The bodies oT To- day's sTudenTs To meeT The rigid TesTs oT Tomorrow. Because oT limiTed Tacil- iTies, noT all oT The sTucienTs were required To enTer physical educaTion courses This year. Only Tive courses in The subiecT were made necessary Tor The gradua- Tion oT boTh boys and girls. Classes meT on a Twice- weelcly schedule, eiTher aT KauTz Field, FosTer Park, The girls' gym in The high school. or The YMCA Tor The boys. Opening wiTh a shorT period of calisThenics, baslceTball, soTTball, deck Tennis, or Team relays. each gym class worked TogeTher To develop The aims oT Top: Girls exercise on bars. BoHom: Healfh classes learn abou? such Things as The sfernum skelefel sirucfure from popular Jenny. is needed as Well as prowess physical educaTion . . . good healTh, clean habiTs, Tair play, and menTal alerTness. A leader, whose duTies included keeping records, Tilling grade cards, and seTTing an example Tor his classmaTes, was chosen To head each oT The gym classes. Besides The regular courses in physical ed- uceiTion, The Treshmen boys and girls were re- quired To Take Two halT- year courses, which were T-lealTh and S a T e T y. l-lealTh is a generalized sTudy oT The diTTerenTAor- ganisms oT The body, bone sTrucTure, and care oT The body. ParT oT The course was devoTed To The Theory and pracTical applicaTion oT TirsT aid. This included pracTice in The auThorized meThod oT arTiTicial respiraTion. As a sequel To l-lealTh comes SaTeTy which an- alyzes accidenTs and Their prevenTion. Every- day healTh and saTeTy hazards are sTudied in an eTTiorT To impress The Top: Mrs. Helen SmiTh, Sill, and Miss Miriam Bofiom: Mr. Raymond Mr. William McBeTh, Ter Hill, and Mr. Ralph King. viTal need oT Their preyenTion upon The sTu- denTs. BoTh courses were supplemenTed by Tilms and posTers which were provided by The Visual EducaTion DeparTmeriT. To The Physical EducaTion DeparTmenT goes much crediT Tor a iob well done. El Page 31 QE in ecimals, and Tangents. Under The supervision oT lvlr, Fred Moss, The lv1aThemaTics DeparTmenT TuncTions as one oT The mosT signiTicanT in Kl-TS. lV1r.Moss has six assisTanTs:lv1r. Lloyd Keisling, Mr. Lee Dixon, Mr. Rob- erT Barngrover, Mr. Edson VanDorn, Mr. KenneTh Crook, and Dean Jones. During The war, The need Tor maThe- maTics developed To a greaT exTenT. The aTomic bomb, bomb calorimeTers and oTher new invenTions require a high- er Torm oT maThemaTics. UniversiTies are now demanding more maTh Tor en- Trance Than ever beTore in college his- Tory. In Kokomo l-ligh School advanced courses are now being oTTered Tor Those sTudenTs who are inTeresTed in TurTher- ing Their sTudy oT maThemaTics. The maThemaTics courses oTTered in Kl-TS are general maTh, TirsT and second years oT algebra, plane and solid geom- eTry, and TrigonomeTry. Iv1a+h is guiTe essenTial Tor The sTudy- ing oT oTher subiecTs. These subiecTs include: chemisTry, physics, hisTory, and courses in home economics. Though many oT ou do noT realize iT aT The Time, The maTh we Take in high school will help us in laTer liTe. Top: IX HZ doesn'T hold Terrors for some. Middle: Mr. KenneTh Crook, Mr. Rober+ Barngrover, and Mr. Lee Dixon. Boffom: Mr. Lloyd Keisling, Mr. Edson Van Dorn, and Mr. Fred Moss. Gut housewives o tomolrow wele trauie Coolcing is an arf . . . as high school gals soon learnedl Because prep- aralion of food is a maior proiecl in every home, our furure housewives fell ihai' Jrheir lime was well spenr. The girls nor only learned how To produce well- balanced meals, buf They also learned how lo ser an aliraclive lable and how ro buy foods wisely. l-lome proiecls, required by every siuclenl in home economics classes, added inleresl 'ro worlc done in rhe home. A+ lhe end of Jrhe semesler, wrillen reporls, giving in derail whal lhe sludenls did lor lheir proiecls, were reguired before a credir could be given. Qur high school also oliered clorh- ing classes. The sludenr learned wha? colors besr suired her, how lo choose slrong and durable, yer prelly, marer- ials, and how lo dress more becoming- ly. Miss Chesrina Williams and her lhree assislanls are The home econom- ics slall. ll is said lhal +he way lo a man's hearl is Jrhrough his siomachf' so per- haps someday lhe men folks will ap- preciare rhe ellorls we have made. Top: Girls learn how +o adlusf a paHern. Middle: Miss Bernice Doody and Mrs. Louis Blanche Greenlee. Bofiorn: Miss Chesfina Williams and Mrs. Pauline Orem. as were Allie Zlllll Century lQC17l1l71'El11LllIS, 'Wi xl i gi me 'l Swv B li R w: Commander Claude McCo , Rufh Ellen Armslrong, William Galloway, Roberf Musgrave, Marilyn Moran, Miss Bernice McKinley Y w: Bob Pickering, Beverly O'Reair, Jack Childs, Under ine insiruclion oi Miss Bernice McKinley, llwe Ari Deparlrmenl coniinued, This year, io develop ine scliool's poieniial DaVincis and Disneys. Siudenis in ine Ari Deparlmeni inler- eslod in civic proiecrs eniered ilwe Naf lional Air Mail Posler Coniesi io lielp adver- lise llie new, reduced Air Mail raies. Awards were presenied by The local Posl Office lor ine besi posiers before ilwey were seni on fo ine naiional coniesi lo be iudged. Coniriburing io The siudenls' praciicai appreciarion oi arl, were irips io Brown Couniy in Qciober lo siudy na'rure's lall lasliions, and ilwen laier, io ilie Jolin l-lerron Ari lnsiifuie. P 34 All ilie ari siudenis pariicipaied in an exlwibii lield in co-operaiion wiili llwe Ari As- sociaiion ol Kolcomo. Alilwougli Miss McKinley lwas promoied, in ine pasi lwo years, iwo commercial ari- isis and an aspiring carloonisi, mosl ol ner siudenis will nor assume arr as a vocaiion bui rallwer as an avocalion. Ai an exlwibii in Marclw ai Bloclcs, lndian- apolis, Marilyn Moran and Roberl Musgrave received ceriilicaies ol merii, while Beverly O'Reair and Edgar Garberl received Scliol- asiic gold keys and were iurilier honored by lwaving ilieir worlc seni on ro Piiisburgli for ilwe naiional exlwibii. H and f 1' OT ITIUSIL Wele apprec1aTe , Too The purpose oT The Music DeparT- menT is noT necessarily To Turn ouT ac- complished musicians, buT To TosTer a beTTer undersTanding oT music. During The school year oT I945- I 946 a special course in music appreciaTion was added To The curricula oT KI-TS Tor Those sTudenTs wishing To sTudy The Torms and hisTory oT music. As The versaTile leader oT The band, Mr. Mahlon Mercer was responsible Tor iTs enjoyable acTiviTies among which were The audiTorium programs and The beauTiTul Spring ConcerT. In The pasT year, The band has been as much a parT oT our TooTball games as The players. AT half-Time iT played everyThing Trom marches To popular ballads. ln The vocal deparTmenT we had Three TalenTed groups who gave several inspiring programs during The year. The choir, under The direcTion oT Miss Mary A. PausseT, presenTed innumerable pro- grams ThroughouT The year Tor The schools, local clubs, and civic organiza- Tio'is. One oT The choirs' ouTsTanding programs was The one given aT ChrisT- mas Time. The Girls' Glee Club and The Boys' Glee Club, direcTed by Miss FausseT and Mr. Mercer, proved To be enjoyable enTerTainmenT Tor The public as well as Tor The sTudenTs oT KI-IS. Top: The STr.ng Music Class Prachces. Boffomz Mr. Mahlon Mercer and Miss Mary A. FausseT. To The lathes and linojcypes ThaT handsome, neaTly polished l3ric-a- prac ThaT has been displayed ThroughouT The school on various occasions was pro- duced by The house-builders oT TuTure days. The vocaTional shop boys. These sTudenTs spenT aT leasT Three per- iods a day over The diTTiculT machinery, and Two periods a day were provided Tor Those enrolled in general shop. The necessary rna- chinery consisTed oT a ioinTer, a drill-press, a band saw, a sander, a shaper, and numerous oTher implemenTs ThaT help To explain The proTiciency oT The worlc done in These well- eguipped high school shops. To help round ouT The VocaTional Course, which was under The direcTion oT Mr. Virgil Fleenor, PrinTing and Radio were oTTered. In The prinTing classes, where paTience as well as The rules rnusT be TaughT and applied, LefT: Bo s use mehal lafhes in machine sho . Y P Upper righT: Mr. Alfred Himelick and Mr. ChesTer Thompson. Lower righT: Mr. George Harfmann and Mr. Rex Clingenpeel. ge 36 with Training in manual arts, We These promising sTudenTs prinTed grade cards, school slips, and programs Tor The various school TuncTions ThaT occured dur- ing The year. The radio classes become Tamiliarized wiTh This well-worded ThoughT in radio consTrucTion: Begin wiTh someThing small and worlc up To someThing big. They learned The compleTe consTrucTion oT a radio This way by building and dismanTling The complicaTed radio seTs. ln The TlaT-Topped l-laworTh Gym, high school machine shop classes were held ThroughouT each day. Similar work Toi' grade-school classes was also provided which prepared These sTudenTs Tor The more com- plicaTed and Tedious work oT high school. Louder Than The noise Trom The roar of The machines in These busy classes is Their everlasTing promise To socieTy oT honesT workmanship and selT-suTTicienT manhood. Upper IeTT: Mr. Donald BarleTT and Mr. Jesse Couch. Lower leff: Mr. Ray N ewlon and Mr. Evereff Mason. Righh Boys in Aufo Mechanics learn by ac+ually doing. Pg 37 Siucliecl The Kingis English and English is required noT only Tor gradua- Tion, buT also Tor success in almosT any vo- caTion. ThereTore, The English DeparTmenT, headed by Miss l-lelen Ross, included gram- mar, composiTion, journalism, speech, and liTeraTure in iTs course. Since correcT speech is noT insTincTive buT learned, The TundamenTal principles of grammar, which are necessary Tor eiTher spealcing or wriTing correcTly, were sTresseo in all English classes. Speech classes were oTTered To Those who desired To presenT ideas more eTTec- Tively so ThaT oThers would undersTand and accepT Them. This skill is used in public spealcing and also in daily conversaTion. IT is developed by increasing vocabulary, cor- recTing pronunciaTion, and improving The VOIC9. To increase slcill in liTerary and iournalis- Tic wriTing, The curriculum included com- posiTion and iournalism courses. These courses were designed To aid sTudenTs in preparaTion Tor college worlq and in Their im- mediaTe wriTing Tor personal needs. Miss Fay Cover, an English Teacher, also direcTs The school's visual educaTion program which provides moving picTures and record- ings. The librarian, Miss Mary Ellen Vergin, is in charge oT The reTerence maTerial. Pae38 Mr. Clarence Laymon, Miss Helen Ross, and Miss Nelda ShowalTer. M ss Fay Cover, Miss Dorofhy Thorn- burgh, and Mrs. Lena Coombes. Top: English classes learn syllabica- lion. Middle: Mrs. Mildred Kern, Miss Elizabeflw Handley, and Miss lrene Rufly. Boflom: Miss Lili+li Ferlow, Mrs. Dione Musiard, and Miss Doro+hea Pohl- fnan. Page 39 ge 40 lingoes oT other countries, Too. Buenas dias, senor, quoTed our CasTilian-Tongued Spanish sTudenTs as They puT inTo pracTice The lan- guage They were TaughT by The Span- ish DeparTmenT under The direcTion oT Miss RuTh Campbell. Realizing ThaT The world is bee coming more closely relaTed by The hour, we also sTudied The SouTh American counTries in order To reach a beTTer undersTanding oT Their hab- iTs and cusToms. We killed Two birds wiTh one sTone' '... ThaT sTone being in The Torm oT correspondence wiTh Toreign high school sTudenTs, as we TurThered our inTernaTional relaTions wiTh our Spanish-speaking neighbors and re- ceived pracTical applicaTion in read- ing and wriTing The language. We didn'T TorgeT l.aTin eiTher. fXlThough iT is a dead language, we realized ThaT iT is The basis oT all The Romance languages: Spanish, French. and lTalian. WiTh Miss T-lelen Railsbaclc as head oT The deparTmenT, LaTin was TaughT primarily as a valuable aid To vocabulary and word sTrucTure, and as a sTudy ol Roman hisTory. Ad- vanced sTudenTs sTudied The baTTles and vicTories oT Caesar. Top: Spanish sTudenTs learn The sublunchve mood. Middle: Mrs. Lucile Shoal, Miss Ruth Campbell, Miss Helen Railsbaclr, and Miss Doris Consodine. BoTTom: Please give The principle paris of dono. WGIH always 1fGII161'11lJG1' . MR. GEORGE SHEWMON Whefher we had Mr. Shewmon as a feacher or nof, we could nof help buf feel fhe frue warmfh of his personalify. Al- fhough his official dufy was fo feach us English, he did much more fhan fhaf. l-lis example of unselfishness, sense of humor, and mosf of all, his zesf for living is why we shall always remember Mr. George Shew- mon. MISS JoY GoYER l-ler graduafion from our school may ac- counf for Miss Joy Goyer's never losing her infimafe fouch wifh Ki-IS and, conseguenfly, us. Nof only fhe Lafin sfudenfs, buf all of us found fhaf Miss Goyer possessed fhaf rare qualify of complefe undersfanding of our problems, bofh scholasfic and personal. Needless fo say, Miss Goyer's passing has been and is a definife loss fo us all. Pa ge 41 'f W ' .5 - V .ff 1 . r ' lf- . swiss gb, ,-Q. X Iwi, V Q .1' ' 'vw nu-4.1-Op - , Qi . ' l.3ffT -f i' . - -ff' 41? .3 ' fix' .Y N ..- ., ,. 1 ' . - 77. P 5.3--' ' ku, gf r-r 4 x. ,,v 9 1 '1 3' 1 xx Page 42 great witllout our Page 43 The almighty Q SenioriTy . . . aT lasT we have iT. YeT we have Tound our lasT year To be li++Ie diTTerenT Trom The pasT war-Time years Our schedules were seT on The posT war-Time road oT back To normalcy as mid-Term graduaTions were cuT and some oT our Sen- iors aTTended NSPA, Purdue l.egislaTure and oTher convenTions meeTing Tor The TirsT Time since The war. ln line wiTh TradiTion, we elecTed our class oTTicers: Joe SmiTh, presidenT, Bud Jones, vice-presidenTg Ramona Croddy, sec- reTaryp and Dave Cowell, Treasurer. Miss LiliTh Farlow, Miss GerTrude Cole Mildred Kern, and Mr. l.esTer McCarTy were our very able sponsors. scoTT, Mrs. OTher leaders were chosen from The Sen- ior Class and Bud Jones, Tom Crai Babb, Jack Jones, Tom Lear, Tom Noble, g, Nelson Pag 44 Officers: Ramona Croddy, secre- den ' 7 C GIIIOIS 1 YOU VC YGE1Cl16Ci., Jim Sheerin, and Joan W us in The STudenT CouncH. agoner represenTed ln The casT oT our class play Senior Thespians oTTered Three when They presenTed ThaT Girl, PaTsy. acTs oT comedy Turning on our Senior glamour, Miriam ShowalTer reigned over The STardusT Ball while Jackie Richcreek was chosen queen oT The Junior-Senior Prom. We realized we were receiving The TirsT oT our walking papers when our Se Tures were Taken. NexT came name cards. CommencemenT announcemen nior pic- Ts, inviTaTions To a wonderTul Prom, and aT lasT . . . we Took our Tinal sTeps To our Class Day exer- cises, BaccalaureaTe service, and Then don- ned caps and gowns To sTep Through Com- mencemenT and on ouT inTo The world be- yond Kl-lS. dy flipping forty ABERSOLL, DEAN, General Course, Enlered from Iclaville, Indiana, 2. ADAIR, JOSEPH E., General Course, Moniior, 3, 4, Track, 3, 4. ADAIR, RUSSELL W., JR., General Course, Monilor, I, 3, Caplain, 4, Traclc, 3, 4. ADAMS, NANCY, Academic Course, Honor Sociefy, 3, 4, Girls' League Council, 2, 3, 4, Sargasso, 3, Associale Edilor, 4, Hullabaloo, 2, 3, Senior Class Play, Dean's Helper, 2, 3, 4. ALLEN, EXIE RUTH, Commercial Course, G. A. A., I, 2, 3, 4. AUSTIN, BETTY, Commercial Course, Monilor, I, 2, 3, Junior Salesman. lk 18 HY BABB, NELSON, Academic Course, Sfudenl' Council, 2, 3, 4, Boys' Leg.on Board ol' Direciors, I, 3, 4, Foofball, I, 2, 3, 4, Spanish Club, 2, 3, Presidenl, 2, Organizaiion Board, 4, Honor Socieiy, 4. BAGWELL, BARBARA, Commercial Course, Sludeni Council, 3, Sargasso, 4, Red and Blue, 3, Business Manager, 4, Pre-Nursing Club, 2, Dean's Helper, 4. BAGWELL, MARVIN, Vocafional Course. -four argasso pages BARTHELEMY, BARBARA JO, Commercial Course, Sargasso, 4, Red and Blue, 2, Freshman Forum. BARTHELEMY, MARILYN MAE, Commercial Course, Red and Blue, 2, Sargasso, 4, Freshman Forum. BAUM, ROSALIE M., General Course, Red and Blue, 4, Mon- i'Ior, I, 2, Girls' Glee Club, I, 2, Palefie Club, 3, Span- ish Club, I, 2, Library Assis+an+, 3, 4. ir It il BEATTY, KENNETH R., General Course, Operalors Club, I, 2, 3, 4, President 2, 3. BEATTY, LYNETTE, General Course, Sargasso, 4, Red and Blue, 3, 4, Monilor, I, 2, 4, G. A. A., I, 4, Girls' Glee Club, 4, PaIeHe Club, 3. BECK, JAMES O., Academic Course, Monilor, 4, Hullabaloo, 3, Boys' Chorus, 3, Senior Class Play. BENNETT, BETTE, Academic Course, Enfered from Elwood, ln- diana, 2, Sargasso, 4, Red and Blue, 4, Monilor, 3, Pre- Nursing Club, 3, Aeronaufics Club, 3. BERNECHE, LAWRENCE JOSEPH, Academic Course, Quill and Scroll, 4, Sargasso, 4, Lens, 4, Red and Blue, 3, 4, Hullabaloo, 4, Operafors Club, I, 2, 3, 4. BERRY, MARTHA, Commercial Course, Monilor, I, ln'FanI Oraiors, ll, 3, Dean's Helper, 4. Page 45 what llas 'caleen us our years 0 BOHANNON, WILLETTE, Commecrial Course: Monilor, 2: Girls' Glee Club, 2. BOND, IDA BELLE, Home Economics Course: Home Econom- ics Club, I: Dean's Helper, 3, 4. BOND, KEITH D., General Course: Sludenf Council, 2: Moni- for, 2: Hullabaloo, 3: Orcheslra, 2, 3: Band, 2, Sfudenf Manager, 3, 4: Clarinel Oclef, 4. BOONE, BARTLEY FREDERICK, Academic Course: Scholaslic Honors, 3: Moniior, 2, 3: Band, I. BOWEN, PHYLLIS JOAN, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Mon- ilor, I, 2, 4: Girls' Glee Club, 4: Pre-Nursing Club, I, 2. BROWN, JOHN EDWARD, Academic Course: Monifor, I: Span'sI1 Club, 2, 3: Radio Club, I. if Ik If BROWN, LOUISE, Home Economics Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2, 4. BUGHER, WILLIAM D., Academic Course: Quill and Scroll, 3, 4: Honor Sociely, 3, 4: Sludenl Council, I, 3: Sar- gasso, 3: Business Manager, 4: Red and Blue, 2: Adver- rising Manager, 3: Clwoir, l, 2, 3, 4. BUSHMAN, LAWRENCE, General Course: Enfered from Pul- aski, Indiana, 4: Hullabaloo, 4: Boys' Chorus, 4. Page 46 BUTLER, JACK E., General Course. CALVEARD, BEVERLY J., Commercial Course: Red and Blue, 4: Monilor, 4. CARDWELL, JOHN W., General Course: Baskelball, l: Fool- ball, I, 2: Track, I: Dramafic Club, 2, 3: Franklin Club, 2, 3. lk IK ik CAROTHERS, PATRICIA, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 3, 4: Monifor, I, 2: Band, I, 2, 3, 4: Orchesfra, I, 2, 3: Dean's Helper, 4. CARR, BARBARA, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 3: Glee Club, 3: Franklin Club, 3: Dean's Helper, 4: Nurse's Helper, 4. CARROLL, MARY ANN, General Course. CASSIS, BETTY, Commercial Course: Monilor, 4: Red and Blue, 4. CASSIS, ROBERT, General Course: Hullabaloo, 4: Foolball, 2, 3, Sfudenl Manager, 4. CATRON, COLLEEN, Home Economics Course: Monifor, 2 I I mental gymnastics to accomplish. CATT, JACK RICHARD, Academic Course. CHISM, BARBARA, Commercial Course: Red and Blue, 4: Monifor, 2: G. A. A., I. CHRISTOPHER, BETTE LOUISE, Commercial Course: Sfudenl' Council, I: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4: Monilor, 2, 3: Dean's Helper, 3: Nurse's Assisfanf, 4. CLARK, PATRICIA ANN, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, I, 2, 4: Monilor, 4: Hullabaloo, 4: Freshman Forum. CLEVENGER, JUANITA, Commercial Course: Monilor, I, 2: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2, 3: Madrigal Club, I, 2. CLIFFORD, CLARA EMILY, General Course: Sargasso, 3, As- sisfanf Business Manager, 4: Lens, 4: Recl and Blue, 2, 3' Hullabaloo, 2, 4: Franlrlin Club, 2, 3: Dean's Helper, 4. Ik lk if COADY, DAVID, Academic Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2: Monilor, 2, Capfain, 3, 4: Hullabaloo, 2: Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3. COLLINS, PATRICIA, General Course: Girls' Glee Club I, 2. COLLINS, ROSETTA, General Course: Monilor, I: G. A. A. I, 2. COLVIN, FLORENCE, Commercial Course. COOK, WILLIAM E., Vocalional Course. COWELL, BEVERLY, Commercial Course: Monifor, I, 2, 4: G. A. A., I: Freshman Forum. 4- -u in COWELL, DAVID, Vocalional Course: Sluclenl Council, 3: Class Treasurer, 4: Boys' Legion Board of Direc+ors, 4: Monilor, 3, 4: Foolball, I, 2, 3, 4. COWGILL, OTHELLA, Academic Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, I, 2: Band, I, 2, 3, 4: Orcheslra, 2, 3: Fresh- man Forum: Library Assislanl, 4. COX, EDWARD LESLIE, General Course: Sargasso, 3: Red and Blue, 2: Monifor, I, 3, 4: Palelle Club, 2, 3: Office Scoul, 2. COY, MELMA K., Home Economics Course: Enlered from Tip- Ion, Ind., 3. CRAIG, IDA JANE. Home Economics Course: Enlerecl from MI. Heallhy, Ohio, 4: Band, 4. CRAIG, THOMAS, Academic Course: Sludenl Council, I, Vice-Presidenf, 4: Class Secrelary, 3: Boys' Legion Treas- urer, 4: Baslrelball, I, 2, 3, 4: Traclr, I: Fcolball, I. Page 'BCH to Pur ue, CRODDY, RAMONA, Commercial Course: Class Secrelary, 45 Red and Blue, 4, Girls' Glee Club, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. CURLEE, PHYLLIS JEAN, Commercial Course, Girls' League Council, 4: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2, 3: Choir, 3, 4, Palelle Club, 3, 4: Pan-American Club, 3, 4. DAUGHERTY, MARY F., General Course, Monilor, 2, 3, Glee Club, 27 Spanish Club, 2. DAVIS, GLENWCOD, Vocalional Course, Foofball, lg Band, 2, 3, 4. DIEDEN, DEBORAH ANNE, General Course, Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4: Monilor, 47 Hullabaloo, 4, Spanish Club, 3, 4, Pan-American Club, 3. DIMITT, JAMES, General Course: Red and Blue, 4, Hulla- baloo, 3, 43 Traclz, 4, Spanish Club, 3, 4.- 4: il in DRAGO, ANN MARIE, General Course. DRURY, JAMES M., Vocalional Course: Monilor, 2: Baseball, 3, 4. DUNN, BILLY E., General Course Page 48 Ne W Yearis Champs, EADES, BARBARA ANN, General Course: Honor Sociely, 3, 4: Sargasso, 3, 41 Pre-Dramalic Club Presidenl, 25 Choir, 3, 41 Franlulin Club, 3, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. EISINGER, RAY, General Course, Monilor, lg Band, l, 2. ELLIOTT, JUANITA Z., General Course, Red and Blue, 2, Monilor, 2, 4, Home Economics Club, 23 Spanish Club, Z. Sk It 1 ELLIS, MARILYN, General Course, Red and Blue, Produclion Manager, 3, Circulalion Manager, 4: Monifor, 2, Girls' Glee Club, 3, Pre-Dramalic Club, 2. ESKRIDGE, RAY, General Course, Enlered from Elwood, ln- diana, 27 Monilor, 4, Baslrelball, 3, 4: Traclr, 3, 4. FAGER, TOM, General Course: Band, 2, 3, 4. FAUNCE, VEARL, General Course: Traclz, 2. FERGUSON, MARY EILEEN, General Course: Enlered 'From Henning, Ill., 4: Girls' Glee Club, 4. FERRY, MARY CATHERINE, General Course: Girls' League Council, lg Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2: lnfanl Oralors, ll, 3, Lalin Club, 3. Senior corals ill, comp C ass, Senior FEWELL. EUGENE W., Vocafional Course: Monifor, 21 Fooi- ball, 2. FINNEY, WALTER D., Academic Course: Sfudeni Council, I 2, Monifor, 2, 4: Hullabaloo, I, 2: Foofball, I, 2, 3, 4. FISHER, PEGGY MAE, Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4, Red and Blue, 4: Monifor, 3, 47 G. A. A., 3, 4. FISHER, BEVERLY SUSANN, Commercial Course, Girls' Glee Club, I, 2, 3. FLEMING, ROBERT G., Vocalional Course FORDYCE, MURREL, JR., Vocalional Course: Operalors Club 2, 3. Ill 4' lk FRETZ, RICHARD CARL, Academic Course: Honor Sociely, 3 4: Scholasfic Honors, 2, 31 Sargasso, 3, 47 Red and Blue 47 Monifor, 21 Operafors Club, 3, 4. FULWIDER, WILLIAM, General Course: Freshman Forum. GALLION, ROBERT E., General Coursey Monifor, 2, 3, 4' Hullabaloo, 3, 4, Baseball, 2, 3, 4: Aeronaufics Club, 3: Pre-Dramaiic Club, 23 Pan-American Club, 3. GALLOWAY, WILLIAM L., General Course: Red and Blue, 4: Hullabaloo, 3: Baseball, 3, 43 Baslrelball, Ig Track Sfudenl Manager, 3: Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3, 4. GAMRATH, RICHARD, Academic Course: Boys' Legion Board of Direciors, 2: Lens, 3: Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 43 Franklin Club, 2, 3, 4: Dramalic Club, 2, 3, Presidenf, 4. GARBERT, EDGAR, General Course: Lens, I, 2, 35 Red and Blue, 3, 4: Hullabaloo, 3, 4: Operafors Club, I, 2, 3, 4: Display Cases, 3, 4. 1 ii 1 GERHART, MADONNA, Commercial Course, Sargasso, 4: Freshman Forum. GILBERT, ALICE, General Course, Monifor, 2, Caplain, 3: Office Scouf, 3. GORE, FREDA, Home Economics Coursey Palefle Club, 3. GRADY, BILL, General Course. GRAHAM, JOY ELIZABETH, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Monifor, 2: Orchesfra, 2: Pre-Dramaiic Club, 2, Fan- American Club, 3, Dean's Helper, 4. GRAVES, WILLIAM J., Vocalional Course: Foolball, I, 2, 3, 4. Page 49 Page Prom, UFFIIEIL Girl Patsyf' cap an gown- GREER, RALPH, General Course. GROVER, EDWIN R., General Course: Monifor, I, 2: Hulla- baloo, 4. GRUISER, MERRILL, General Course: Monilor, I, 2: Oper' afors Club, 2. GUNTHER, JANE ANN, Commercial Course: Monilor, 2: L' bra ry Assisla nl, 4. HALL, JACK HUETT, General Course: Sluclenl Council, I, 2: Boys' Legion Board of Direclors, I, 2: Lens, 3: Hullabaloo I, 2, 3, 4: Foolball, I, 2, 3: Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3 HALL, WILLIAM KENNETH, Vocalional Course. x m 1 HAMMER, VIRGINIA, General Course: Red and Blue, 2: Hul- labaloo, 2, 4: Pre-Nursing Club, 2, 3: Pre-Dramalic Club, 2: Freshman Forum. HARPER, MADONNA, Commercial Course: Monllor, I, 2 Freshman Chorus: Girls' Glee Club, 2: Madrigal Club, I 2: Dean's Helper, 3, 4. HARRIS, DONALD K., General Course: Monilor, 2: Foolball I, 3, 4: Conservalion Club, 2. 50 I-IAWORTH, JOHN W., General Course: Monilor, I, 2: Fool- ball, I: Freshman Forum. HEADY, MARY LOUISE, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4: Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 4: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2: Dramalic Club, 3, 4: Dean's Helper, 3, 4. HEATHCOAT, DOROTHY, Commercial Course: Monifor, 2, 3, 4: Nurse's Helper, 4. K li ll HEDRICK, RUTH LOUISE, General Course: Honor Sociely, 3, 4: Sludenl Council, 3: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 3: Spanish Club, 3, 4: Dean's Helper, 3, 4. HEFLIN, JEANNE ANNE, Commercial Course: Monilor, 3, 4. HEFLIN, JOHN H., Academic Course: Monifor, 2, 3: Con- servalion Club, 2: Pre-Dramalic Club, 2. HEINEMANN, FANNIE, Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, I: Monifor, I, 2: Girls' Glee Club, 3: Choir, 4: Freshman Forum. HENDRIX, BETTY LOU, Commercial Course: Monilor, I, 2, 3, 4: G. A. A., 3, 4: Pre-Nursing Club, I, 2, 3. HENRICKS, SHIRLEY J., General Course: Sargasso, 4: Hulla- baloo, 2, 4: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2: Pre-Dramalic Club, 2: Dean's Helper, 4: Nurse's Helper, 3. you can easi y see that in 'clue HERR, MARJORIE JO, Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4: Monilor Caplain, 3, 4: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2: Fresh- man Forum: Office Scoul, 3, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. HERR, VIRGINIA LEE, Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4: Mon- ifor, I, 2, Caplain, 4: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2: Freshman Forum: Office Seoul, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. HESS, ROBERT D., Vocalional Course: Trac-Im, I, 2: Foolball, I, 2. HESSELMAN, DORIS, Home Economics Course: Palelle Club, 2, 3. HEWETSON, BRUCE, General Course. HICKMAN, BETTY, Commercial Course: Enlered from Rus- siaville, Ind., 3: Girls' Glee Club, 3: Choir, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. Sk It HY HICKS, MARILYN, Academic Course: Quill and Scroll, 3, 4: Honor Sociely, 3, 4: Scliolaslic Honors, 2: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2, Adverlising Manager, 3: Monifor Cap- Iain, 2, Secrelary, 3, 4. HIERS, EUGENE, General Course: Enlered from Sanla Monf- ca, Calif., 4. HIGGINS, DONALD GAIL, Academic Course: Hullabaloo, 3, 4: Band, I, 2, 3, 4. HIGHT, BETTY LOUISE, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Senior Class Play: Red and Blue, 2, 3, 4: Chofr, 4: Franlrlin Club, 2, 3: Dean's Helper, 4. HOBBS, RAY, General Course. HOLLINGSWORTH, RICHARD, Academic Course: Entered from Russiaville, Ind., 4: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. lk Ill It HOLLIS, JULIA, Home Economics Course: Band, I, 2,' 3, 4: Orclieslra, 2, 3. HOLMAN, JEAN M., General Course: Sfudenl' Council, 3: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, I, 2, 4: Monifor, I, 2, Cap- lain, 4: Hullabaloo, I, 2, 3: Dramalic Club, 2, 3, 4. HOLT, ROBERT, JR., Vocalional Course: Baslcelball, I, 2, 3: Foolball, I: Golf, 3, 4. HORTON, RICHARD, Vocalional Course. HUGHES, BARBARA JANE, Commercial Course: Red and Blue, 4: Monilor, 4. HULLINGER, BONITA, Commercfal Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2, 4: Monilor, I: Freshman Chorus: Girls' Glee Club, 2, 3: Pre-Dramalic Club, 2. Page 51 nlaile and Times ol tlle ' Classf' HUMMEL, CHARLES, General Course: Enlered from Clay Twp., I: Monifor, 4. HUNNESHAGEN, MARJORIE E., General Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4: Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 4: Choir, 3, 4: Dramafic Club, 3, 4: Dean's Helper, 2, 4. HUNT, MARTHA, Commercial Course: Red and Blue, 4: Monifor, I, 2: Freshman Forum. HUSTON, LLOYD A., General Course IRBY, BARBARA, Commercial Course: Honor Sociefy, 3, 4: Scholaslic Honors, I, 2, 3: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, I, 4: Franlrlin Club, 3: Dean's Helper, 4. IRICK, CHRISTINA, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Monilor, 2: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2, 3: Spanish Club, 3: Library As- sislanf, 3. ll It if JACOBS, KARLENE, Academic Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2, 3: lnfanl Orafors, II, 3: Dean's Helper, 3. JAHNKE, ALDEN WAYNE, General Course: Red and Blue, 3: Monilor, I, 2, 3: Hullabaloo, 3: Traclr, I, 4: Foofball, I, 2, 4: Operalors Club, 2, 3, 4. JOHANNES, MARILYN, Commercial Course: Moniior, 3: Girls' Glee Club, 2, 3. gage 52 JOHNSON, CARL, General Course: Hullabaloo, 2, 3: Foo?- ball, I, 2, 3, 4: Choir, 2, 3, 4: Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3, 4: Pan-American Club, 4, Presidenf, 3. JOHNSON, CAROL JOAN, Commercial Course: Mon.Ior, I, 2, 3: Freshman Chorus: Girls' Glee Club, 2: Madrigal Club, I, 2: PaIeHe Club, 2, 3. JOHNSON, DOLORES MAE, Commercial Course: Honor So- ciely, 3, 4: Scholaslic Honors, I, 2, 3, 4: Sludenl' Council, 2, 3: Girls' League Council, 3, Presidenl, 4: Dean's Help- er, 2, 3, 4: Infanl' Oralors, II, 3, 4. 11 if Ik JOHNSON, JEAN ANNE, Commercial Course: Monilor, 2: Maioselle, 2, 3, 4. JONES, JACK, General Course: Sfudenl Council, 2, 4: Red and Blue, 3: Monifor, I: Hullabaloo, 3, 4: Freshman Forum: Pre-Dramafic Club, 2. JONES, PAUL CARTER, Academic Cousse: Quill and Scroll, 3, 4: Sfudenf Council, I, President 4: Class Vice-Presi- denl, 3, 4: Boys' Legion Board of Direcfors, 2, Secrelary, 4: Red and Blue, 3, Ed lor-in-Chief, 4: Dramalic Club, 2, 3, 4. JUSTICE, ELIZABETH ANN, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4: PaIeH'e Club, 2, 3: Lalin Club, 3: Dean's Helper, 4: Nurse's Helper, 3. KEITH, ROBERT S., Vocalional Course: Monilor, I, 2, 4: Fool- ball, I, 2, 3. KEMP, JOHN, Academic Course it was lille njcimesn KERR, NORMAN JOHN, JR., Academic Course, Sfudenf Council, 35 Sargasso, 43 Monilor, 3, 4, Band, I, 2, 3 4' Lafin Club, 3: Senior Class Play. KEYES, THOMAS R., General Course: Sargasso, 4, Hullabaloo, 3, 4, Band, I, 2, 3, Presidenf, 4: Orcheslra, 2, 3, Dramaiic Club, 3, 4, Senor Class Play. KILCLINE. ELAINE THERESE, General Course, Sargasso, Monifor, 2, 45 Hullabaloo, 2, 45 Girls' Glee Club, Franlclin Club, 2, 3. 4. KIRKPATRICK, BARBARA JANE, General Course: Quill an,I Scroll, 3, 45 Honor Sociely, 3, 41 Scholasfic Honors, 2, Girls' League Council, I: Red and Blue, I, 2, 3, M aging Ed I'o', 47 Junior-Senior Prom Co-Chairman, 3. KLEMME, CHARLES, General Course. KOHN, BARBARA RUTH, General Coursey Honor Sociefy 45 Scholasfic Honors, 2, 3, Sargasso, 45 Red and Bluel, 3, Promolion Mgr., 43 PaIeH'e Club, 2, 35 Pre-Nurs Club Presidenl, 2. if x an KOHN, MARY DELLA, General Course: Honor Sociefy, 3, ScI1oIas+ic Honors, 2, 37 Sargasso, 4, Red and Blue, Z, News Edilor, 43 Hullabaloo, 25 Nurse's Helper, 3, 4. I. 5I'1- 3. 2. H9 4. 3. that ma e our KORBA, CHARLES J., General Course, Red and Blue, 4, Pan- American Club, 3. KREBSER, ALICE, Commercial Course. ICRHIN, DESMA, General Course, Red and Blue, Circulafion Mgr., 3, Business Mgr., 45 Girls' Glee Club, 2, Franlrlin Club, 2, 3. KUNTZ, DONALD R., General Course KUNTZ, JACK R., General Course. ur as 1 KUNTZ, ROSEMARY, General Course. LAMBERSON, CLEVO, Commercial Course, Red and Blue, 4, Dean's Helper, 4. LAND, DOUGLAS W., Vocafional Course, Spanish Club, 2. LEACH, WILLIAM, Voca+ionaI Course: Monifor, I, 4. LEAR, THOMAS, General Course, Boys' Legion Board of Di- reclors, 33 Foofball, 3, 41 Baseball, 2, 3, 4. LEWIS, ELLWOOD W., JR., Academic Course: Boys' Legion Board of Direclors, 25 Sargasso, 4: Lens, 43 Red and Blue, 3, News Edifor, 43 Hullabaloo, 33 Baslceiball Siu- denl Manager, 4. Page 53 Page nlilef' inally W en flue big Weee LEWIS, JAMES, Vocalional Course: Foolball, 2, 3: Track, 2. LIND, JOHN J., Academic Course: Sfudenl' Council, 2: Sar- gasso, 3: Red and Blue, I, 2: Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 4: Choir, 2, 3, 4: Dramalic Club, 2, 3, 4. LOOP, IOLA MAE, Commercial Course: Enlered from Berendo Junior High School, Los Angeles, California, I: Honor Sociely, 3, 4: Scluolaslic Honors, 2: Red and Blue, 4. MCCARTER ,VIRGINIA, Academic Course: Sclwolaslfc Honors, l: Red and Blue, I: Monilor, 2, 3, 4: Hullabaloo, 4: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2: Spanish Club, 2, 3, 4. McCARTER, WILLIAM HENRY, Vocalional Course. McCAULEY, PHYLLIS ANNE, General Course: Honor Sociely, 3, 4: La'l'in Club, 3: Pre-Dramalic Club, 2: Pre-Nursing Club, I: Dean's Helper, 3, 4: Library Assislanl. 2. 1 K Ik McCLAIN, FRANCES M., Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4: Monilor, 2, 3, 4: Hullabaloo, 4: Girls' Glee Club, 2, 3: Pre-Nursing Club, 2, 3, 4: Dean's Helper, 2. MCCLAMROCH, JOHN C., JR., Academic Course: Riverside Mililary Academy, Gainesville, Ga., 3: Army Air Forces, I944-I946: Monilor, 2: Band, I: Freshman Forum. McCLAMROCH, VIRGINIA, General Course: Honor So- cie'l'y, 3, 4: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2, 3, 4: Hulla- baloo, I, 2, 3, 4: Choir, 3, 4: Drama+ic Club, 3, 4. 54 MCCOY, DORIS, Commercial Course: Monilor, 2: G. A. A., I. Mc'ENTEE, MARY HELEN, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4: Monifor, I, 2, 3: Pre-Nursing Club, I, 2, 3: Library Assislanl, 3: Junior Salesman. McGUIRE, NORA, Commercial Course: Red and Blue, 3: Monilor, 2, 3: G. A. A., I: Dean's Helper, I. if If i McKEE, RUTH ANN, Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. MCKINNEY, CAROL JEANNE, Academic Course: Sclwolaslic Honors, 2: Sargasso, 3, 4: Red and Blue, 3, 4: Choir, 3, 4: Dramalic Club, 3, 4. McMANAMA, LOUELLA, Home Economics Course: Enlered from Grass Creek, Indiana, 4. McQUISTON, JACOUE, General Course: Enlered from Greenlown, Indiana, 4: Dramalic Club, 4. MCQUISTON, JO., General Course: Enlered from Greenlown, lndfana, 4: Dramalic Club, 4: Senior Class Play. MAISH, THOMAS NEIL, Vocafional Course: Monilor, 4. came, We traclecl in tlairty-two MAJOR, HELEN LOUISE, Commercial Course: Sludenf Council, I, 2, 3: Monilor, I, 2, 3, Caplain, 4: Freshman Forum. MAPLE, CHARLES, Vocalional Course: Sfudenl' Council, 4: Red and Blue, Adverfising Manager, 4: Track, 2, 3, 4: Band, I, 2: Sir Walfer Raleigh Club, 3: Operalors Club, 3. MARSALLA, CHARLES, Vocalional Course: Sfudenf Council, 3: Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3. MARTIN, REBA, General Course. MARTIN, RICHARD LEE, Commercial Course: Hullabaloo, 4: Baseball, 2, 3, 4. MARTIN, THOMAS, Commercial Course: Enlered 'from S+. Meinrad's Monaslary, Dale, Ind., I: Sludenl' Council Treasurer, 3: Monilor, 2, Capfain, 3: Track, 2, 3. Ik lk lk MILLER, JEAN, Commercial Course. MILLER PAULINE, General Course: Monifor, 3, 4. MIRTH, EDWARD, Vocalional Course. MIRTH, MARILYN, Academic Course: Scholaslic Honors, 2: Monilor, 2, 3, 4: Dramalic Club, 2, 3, 4. MOHR, CARLYN ROSE, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Lens, 3: Hullabaloo, I, 2, 3: Choir, 3, 4: Dramafic' Club. 3, Presiclenl, 4: Library Assisianl, 4. MORGAN, JOHN PAUL, General Course: Hullabaloo, 4: Baslrelball, I, 2, 3: Traclr, I, 2, 3: Band 3.4. ar nr It MORRIS, MAX A., Vocafional Course . MORRISON, JOAN, Commercial Course: Girls' League Council, 2: Sargasso, 4: Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 4: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2: Choir, 3, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. MYERS, ROBERTA FRANCES, General Course: Moni'I'or, I, 4: Pre-Nursing Club, I, 2: Nurse's Helper, 2: Junior Sales- man. NEIBARGER, DONNA JEAN, Commercial Course: Enfered 'From Pensacola, Florida, 3: Scholaslic Honors: 3: Sar- gasso, 4: Girls' Glee Club, 4: Dean's Helper, 4. NEWBY, MARILYN, General Course: Sfudenl Council, 4: Girls' League Presidenl, 4: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 3: Palefle Club, 3: Dean's Helper, 4. NIELANDER, GENE, General Course: Baseball, I, 2, 3, 4: Foolball, I, 2, 3, 4: K Club, 3. Page 55 creclits for a oliploma W1icl1 entitlecl NIELANDER, WILLIAM, General Course: Sludenl Council, 2 Monilor, 2, 3, Foolball, I. NOBLE, THOMAS, General Courseg Sluclenl Council, 2, 3, 4 Boys' Legion Board of Direcfors, lg Lens Edilor, 45 Hul- Iabaloo, I, 2, 3, Chairman, 4, Yell Leader, I, 2, 3, 4: Co- Chairman Junior-Senior Prom, 3. OLSON, ARDYCE ANN, Commercial Course: Monilor, I, 2 3, 4, Girls' Glee Club, 3. O'REAIR, BEVERLY, General Course: Girls' League Vice Prasidenl, 4: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 3, Monilor, 2 PaIeH'e Club, 3: Nurse's Helper, 3. PARKER, BILL, J., General Course, Traclr, I, 23 Baseball, 2, 3 Baslxelball, 2, 3, 43 Foolball, 2, 3, 4: Choir, 2, 3, 4: HK' Club, 3. PATTERSON, AUDREY, Home Economics Course 1 4 fu PEARCE, EDRIS JO, General Course, Sargasso, 43 Lens, 3 Hullabaloo, I, 35 Dramalic Club, 45 Palelfe Club, 3 Dean's Helper, 3, 4. PEARCE, WILLIAM G., General Course: Navy Air Forces I944-I9-16: Monifor, 2. Page 56 PELLS, LOWELL, General Course PERKINS, BEVERLY JOANNA, General Course, Monilor, 2, 4: Gfrls' Glee Club, I, 2, Madrigal Club, I, 25 Choir, 3, 43 Pre-Nursing Club, I, 21 Freshman Forum. PETTAY, ROBERT OWEN, Vocalional Course PIERCE, LAURA JO ANN, Commercial Course: Monitor, 3. if ll li PLATT, JOHN, Vocalional Course: Boys' Legion Board of Direclors, Ig Foolball, 2, 3, 4: Traclz, 2, 3, 43 Baslrelball, 2, 3, 43 Baseball, 3, 4: K Club, 2, 3. PORTER, BERT, JR., General Course: Operalors Club, 2, 3, 4. PUTNEY, AURIE, General Course, Enlered from Clay Twp., Miami Counly, 3: Sclwolaslic Honors, 3, 4. PYKE, CHARLES WAYNE, Vocalional Course. RABOTEAU, ALICE, General Course: Enlered from SI. Rose de Lima, Bay Sl. Louis, Miss., 3. RAINES, GEORGE W., General Course: Enlered from Young America, Ind., 2, Monilor, 2, 4: Palelle Club, 3. us lzo It urst Iorllii upon Julie worlclv - RATCLIFF, JIM, Vocalional Course: Monilor, 4. RAYL, ALLEN B., Academic Course: Sfudenl Council, 2: Boys Legion Board of Direc-Iors, 2: Sargasso, 3, 4: Hullaballo 3, Yell Leader, 2: Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3. RAYMON, PAUL, General Course: Monilor, 2: Foolball, 2, 3, 4. REED, ARLENE M., General Course: Red and Blue, 2, 3, 4: Monilor, 2, 3. REED, JAY LEON, Vocalional Course: Hullabaloo, 4: Fool- ball, 3, 4: Track, 2, 3.4. RICE, CHARLEEN, Commercial Course: Monifor, 2, 3. fx 4- ar RICE, POLLY DEAN, Commercial Course: Enlered from Hagerslown, Ind., 3: Red and Blue, 4: Monilor, 4. RICHCREEK, JACOUELINE, General Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 3, 4: Monilor, 3: Girls' Glee Club, 4. RICHEY, MARILYN A., Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4: Monifor, I, 2: Hullabaloo, 3, 4: Band, I, 2, 3, 4: Orches- Ira, 2, 3: Dean's Helper, 4. ROSE. MARILYN, Academic Course: Spanish Club, 3: Senior Class Play. ROSEBERRY, THOMAS, Academic Course: Quill and Scroll, 3, 4: Honor Sociely, 3, 4: Scholasfic Honors, I, 2, 3: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 3, Edilor, 4: Franklin Club, 2, 3, 4. ROSEMEYER, OPAL, Commercfal Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 2: Monifor, 4. It It if RUCKMAN, JO ANN, Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4: Mon- ifor, I: Dean's Helper, 4. RUNYON, DOYLE, General Course. RUST, RUTH, Commerc'al Course: Red and Blue, 4: Monifor, 2, 3. SANDY, BOB H., General Course: Baskelball, I: Foofball, I. SCHAEFFER, LUCILLE, Home Economics Course. SCHORM, RICHARD, General Course. Page 57 - imeis a-Wastini, youire Coming SCHWARTZ, ALICE MARIE, Home Economics Course, Pre- Nursing Club, 2. SEIBERLING, MARILYN, General Course: Red and Blue, 2, Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 4, Choir, 2, 3, 4: Spanish Club, 33 Nurse's Helper, 4. SENCE, RICHARD, General Course. SHAFFER, DELORES, Commercial Course, Monifor, 23 G. A. A., 3. SHAY, EDWARD, Vocalional Course. SHEARER, JAMES, Academic Course: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 3, 45 Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 4, Track, 2, 3, Choir, 3, 4g Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3. 4. -u x 4 SHEERIN, JAMES L., Academic Course: Sfudenf Council, 3. 4: Boys' Legion Board of Direcfors, I, 3, Sargasso, 43 Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 41 Fooiball, I, 2, 3, 4: K Club, 3. SHORT, BARBARA ANN, General Course, Sargasso, 4, Red and Blue, 3, 43 Monifor, 23 Palelie Club, 2, 3: Dean's Helper, 2, 3, 4. SHOWALTER, MIRIAM, General Course: Honor Sociefy, 3. Presidenf, 4, Class Treasurer, 37 Sargasso, 3, 4: Red and Blue, 3, Adverlising Manager, 4: Palelfe Club, 2, 3: Dean's Helper, 3. Page 58 SHUCK, BARBARA, Commercial Course. SIMMONS, CHRISTINE, Commercial Course: Sargasso, 4: Red aand Blue, 47 Monilor, 2, 3, 45 Hullabaloo, I, 2, 3, 4: Paleffe Club, 2, 3, 43 Dean's Helper, 2, 4. SMALL, THOMAS V., General Course: Red and Blue, 4: Hul- labaloo, 4, Foofball, I. lk ll HY SMITH, CARL, General Course. SMITH, JOSEPH E., General Course: Sfudenf Council, 2, 3, 43 Class Presidenl, 4, Boys' Legion Board of Direclors, I, 2, Presidenf, 4, Foolball, I, 2, 3, 4, Traclr, I, 2, 3, 4: Pur- due Legislalure, 4. SMITH, PAULA, General Course, Monifor, I, 23 Hullabaloo, 37 Band, I, 2, 3, 41 Orcheslra, 2, 3, 41 PaIeHe Club, I, 2, 3, 4. SMITH, RODNEY A., General Course: Enfered from Howe Mililary School, 4: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4, Moni- for, 4: Hullabaloo, 4. SNOW, RUTH ANN, Commercial Coursey Monifor, I, Pre- Nursing Club, 2. SNYDER, JACK, Academic Course, Sargasso, 4, Monilor, I, 2, Baslzelball, I, 2, 3, 4: Foofball, I, 2, Track, 2, 3, 4: Franklin Club, 3. to the en , We'Ve got to grab 'cbose SOUPLEY, FRANCES, Home Economics Course: Pre-Nursing Club, 3. STAHL, BARBARA ANN, General Course. STAKELBECK, TWILA JEAN, Commercial Course: Girls' League Council, Secrefary-Treasurer, 4: Maioreffe, 3, 4: Girls' Glee Club, 4. S'TALEY, BARBARA ANNE, Commercial Course: Monilor, 3: G. A. A., 3: Girls' Glee Club, l, 2, 3, 4. STOUT, JACK, General Course: Enfered from Sharpsville, Indiana, 4. STREAVEL, CHARLES H., Vocafional Course: Qualified for Diploma by Taking General Educafion Developmenf Tesl' Through Armed Forces Insfifufeg Monilor, 3: Track, 3. 41 ar wr STREAVEL, IRMA JEAN, Commercial Course: Monifor, 3. SUMPTER, FRIEDA, Commercial Course: Monilor, 3, 4. SWING, REX J., Academic Course. SYMONS, RUTH ANNALENE, Commercial Course: Monifcr 3. TASH, WAYNE L., Academic Course: Hullabaloo, 3, 4: Band, 2, 3, 4: Dramafic Club, 3, 4: Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3: American Legion Oraforic-al Conlesf, 3: Purdue Legis- lafure, 4. TAYLOR, JANICE IRENE, General Course: Scholasfic Hon- ors, 2, 3: Girls' League Council, 4: Sargasso, 4: Monilor, 4: Maioreffe, 3, 4. if Ill ll TEEGARDEN, TED T., Academic' Course: Sfudenf Council, l, 2: Boys' Legion Board of Direclors, 3: Sargasso. 3, Edi- for-in-chfef, 4: Lens 3, Business Manager, 4: Purdue Leg- islafure, 4: Hullabaloo, 2, 3, 4. THOMAS, JACK, Vocaiional Course: Monilor, 4. THOMAS, YETEVE, General Course: Monifor, 4: Girls' Glee Club, I, 2: Paleile Club, 2, 3: Freshman Forum. THOMPSON, THELMA EVELYN, General Course, Girls' Glee Club, 3: Lafin Club, 3. TURNER, CLARA ROSALEE, Commercial Course: Girls' Glee Club, 4. UNDERWOOD, WILLIAM, Academic Course: Sargasso, 4: Hullabaloo, 3, 4: Foofball, 4: Baskefball, l: Pre-Dramalic Club, 2. Page 59 I va ualole s1eepS2i11s an run. WAGNER, PAUL, Vocalional Course: Baskefball, I: Track, I, 2: Foolball, 2. WAGONER, JOAN G., General Course: Scholasfic Honors, 3: Sfudanl' Council, 4: Sargasso, 4: Red and Blue, 4: Lafin Club, 3. WALTON, RICHARD, Academic Course: Red and Blue, 2, 3: Moniior, 2, 4: Hullabaloo, 3: Dramalic Club, 3, 4: Opera- Iors Club, 2, 3. WEAVER, JACK, E., General Course: U. S. Navy, I945-I946: Foofball, 2, 3, 4: Baskelball, I: K Club, 3, 4. WEBB, ROBERT, General Course: Sfudeni Council, I, 2, 3, 4: Hullabaloo, 3, 4: Baskelball, I: Foolball, I, 2, 3, 4: Choir, 3, Presidenl, 4: Sir Waller Raleigh Club. 3. WEBBER, JACK, General Course: Monilor. 4: Track, 2, 3: Sir Waller Raleigh Club, 3. if i if WHEELER, DONALD, General Course: Monilor, I: Foofball, I, 2, 3, 4: Track, I. WHITE, JAMES, Vocalional Course: Monitor, 3: Foofball, 2, 3. 4: Track, 2: Operafors Club, 2, 3, 4: Chairman of Slar- dusf Ball, 4. WIDNER, JAMES R., Academic Course: Monilor, I: Hulla- baloo, 3: Conservafion Club, 3. WIEBERS, BEVERLY JO, General Course: Sludenl' Council, I: Girls' League Council, 3: Sargasso, 4: Lens, 3: Choir, 4: Palelle Club, 2, 3. WILCOX, KONRAD, Academic Course: Red and Blue, 3, 4: Monilor, 4: Baseball, 2, 3, 4: Baskeiball, I. WILLIAMS, RICHARD, Academic' Course: Red and Blue, 4: Monilor, I, 2, 3: Hullabaloo, 4: Operalors Club, I, 2, 3, 4: Spanish Club, 2, 3. The lollowing Seniors have no picluresz Brown, Wayne Creason, Paul Humphries, Samuel Karabin, Jack Page, Edward Reason, Bill Rickman, Alice Sosbe, Charles Talberf, Phyllis Wenger, Rosemary Whaley, Mary Jeanne Page 60 see you Iaterl WILSON, EDWIN, Vocalfonal Course: Baseball, 2, 3, 4. WILSON, WILLIAM, JOSEPH, General Course: Hullabaloo, 4: Band, I, 2, 3, 4. WILSON, MARY ANN, General Course. WILSON, ROBERT G., General Course: Red and Blue, 2, 3 Dramafic Club, 4: Choir, 2, 3, 4. WILTSE, JOANNE CLAIRE, General Course: Scholasfic Hon- ors, 2: Sargasso, 4: Lafin Club, 3: Pre-Dramafic Club, 2 WOODWARD, DONALD OWEN, General Course: Monilor, 2: Hullabaloo, 3: Band, I, 2, 3, 4: Orchesfra, 2. 1 1 is WRIGHT, MARGARET, General Course: Monilor, I: Girls' Glee Club, 3: Choir, 4: PaleHe Club, 3: Pre-Nursing Club, 2, 3: Library Assisfanl, 4. WRIGHT, ROBERT LEE, General Course: Conservafion Club, 2, Presidenf, 3. YOST, STANLEY GENE, General Course: Enlered from Wesl- lield, Indiana, 2. YOUNGMAN, PEGGY JEAN, Commercial Course: Monilor, 3. ZOLLMAN, WAYNE K., General Course. ZUGELDER, FINIS, General Course: Sfudenl Council, 2, Vice- Presidenf, 3: Class Presidenf, 3, Boys' Legion Board of Direclors Treasurer, 3: Foolball, I, 2, 3: Organizafion Board Presidenl, 3. 4: Foofball, I, 2, 3, 4: Track, I, 2, 3, 4: Band, I, 2, 3, 4: Tune: THE OLD LAMP LIGHTER Wri'Hen By Belly Hiclrman If makes our lives seem so much brighfer Our hearfs wifh ioy aglow, Our own dear high school . . . of Kokomo. Ancl now we leave 'ro seelr our 'Forfune Our lmowledge sc-ope will grow, We leave our high school . . . of Kolromo . We lcnew Ihe 'Fear of Freshman days: 'then caughl fhe swing of Sophomore ways: as Juniors we were blilhe and full of icy: and now as Seniors we musf go, buf 'Ihrough our fufure we will show our sense of pride, of praise and Ioyally . . . For we'lI recall Ihe 'friends we lcnew: fhe ieachers . . . all 'the Ihings we do, and Ireasure 'Ihem wifhin our memory. I+ makes our lives seem so much brighler Our hearls wifh joy aglow, Our own dear high school . . . of Kokomo! Page 61 T1,' ii icyre Next In Line Being Juniors meanl lwaving class jewelry, class officers, a Junior-Senior Prom, and au lorium programs on Fridays. Wiflw our inifialion info llie upperclass- men brackef lli l came e e ecfion of class offi- cers. Mark Garrison was clwosen Corwin l-lusfon, vice-presidenfq Jean Jones, secrefary, and Bill Wagner, lreasurer. Good leaders were found among our represenfaliyes in flue Sludenl Council as Joan Kraner was elecled secrefary and Cor- win l-lusfon, lreasurer. Gur oflier Council members were Leroy Barron, Gene Cole, Jack Croddy, Lowell Ellabarger, Mark Gar- rison, Mariorie Goudy, Leonard l-lerr, Jim Myers, Bob Ridenour, Clarence Rosselof, Max Smelfzer, and Ronald Trimble. Our biggesl proiecl as a Junior class was flwe Junior-Senior Prom. To finance lliis Page 62 presidenlg QFFICERS William Wagner, freasurerg Corwin Husfon, vice-president Jean J T1 . big eyenf, our Junior girls braved all kinds of weallwer fo sell liol dogs 'n sfuffu lo llie foolball fans. Besides s o ' p nsoring mafinee dances, we found a comparalive gold mine in llwe operafion of flue snack bar during flue I . unclw periods. Of course, our facully spon- sors lielped us in all llwese proiecfs. ln February if became lime lo make def- inile plans for llie Prom, so co-clwairmen Janel Cain and Jim Myers were selecled for llie Junior-Senior slwindig. Commiflees were cliosen, work laid, llweme selecfed . . . and kepl secrel . so llwaf finally our plans malerialized flue niglwl of llwe big affair. lf was llien flwaf we realized, willw mixed feelings, llie facf fliaf only one year lay belween fliis spring and our own capping and gowningf' William Abboll William Abrams Wayne Abney Roland Ahlbrand Laurel Alexander Tommy Andrews Marjorie Arnell Bob Arney Doris Arfis Paul Ashba Charles Baer Loisanne Barker Wilma Jo Barnell Leroy Barron Leonard Baxler Loran Beals Jim Beauchamp Edwin Beaver Dick Bergman Bob Berry Jim Bess Marilyn Bobbill James Bogue Verlin Bowland Phillip Braslrell Glen Brooker Ollie Brown Mable Brown Roberf Brown Rulh Brown Frances Bruno Philip Burgin Donald Burlon Russell Buller Anna Janel Cain George Calhoon Delberl' Calloway Eloise Campbell Junior Campbell Judy Campbell Nancy Carolhers Donnalea Carey James Carler Mary Cafherine Carler Roberf Carler Edna Cass Jack Childs Mary Helen Clark Gene Cole Pal' Cole Roberl Collier Leroy Colfer Belly Conkle Belly Cosand Loran Cox William Coy Bruce Crawford Norma Crispen Jack Croddy Mary Lou Crowder Page 63 Page 64 Charlene Dail EY Margarel Joan Daly Sharon Damon James Dane Lou Nell Davis Ray Davis Eliza bella Day Barbara Deisch Larry DeLon Numa Dr-:Lon Pal Denman Rosemary Densborn Dolores Dunlap Mahlon Durr Pa? Dwyer Belly Jo Eades Noel Earles Belly Earlywi he Donna DeShon Carmen Dillman Jack Dowden Shirley Downhour David Drinkwafer William Dufendach Helen Edwards Dicli Ehrhardl Lowell Ellaba rger James Eldridge John Ellers Barbara Ellis Kalhleen Fields Kalhryn Fisher Ramona Flora Anna Mae Forfune lnez Fousf Roberf Frank Jack Ellis Don Farringfon Anila Faullrner Jack Faunce Jim Ferguson Beverly Ferriday Shirley Franlzel Bill French Jaclr Frelz Nance Fridlin Carl Gagle Inez Gagle William Gloye 'lo'n Golighlly Bill Graff Peggy Greer Ari Gross Nancy Gru ber Mark Garrison Roberl Gaslnin Roberf Gaflin Belly Gerharl John Gerrard Bill Giles Wilma Gollner Alden Haggard Jack Hahnerl John Hall William Halley Jay Hamler Pal Hammer Pal Harrison Gerry Harlow Paul Harvey Jean Hayes William Hayes Ray Hewiif Joan Hirsl' Maryann Hodson Douglas Hogan Richard Hoover Ernesf Horoho Richard Helfzel William Hendersho+ Sharon Hendrix Barbara Henry Leonard Herr Wanda Hess Roberl' Hosfeller Roberf Hudelson Roberi Hunley Bonnie Hunsberger Jacl: Hunf Corwin Husfon Billy Joe Jackson Bob L. Jachson Joseph Johnson Doris Jones Jean Jones Margare? Jones Riclr Jusfice Roberl' Kasey Rex Kellar Ru+h Ann Kelly Jean Kennedy Kennedy John Josephine Kinney Joan Kraner Jose Kuhns Ralph Kulow Georgia Lafferly Chrislina Lagambi nd Kennefh Hulchins Roberia HuHo Paul lmlay Norman lronmonger Corabelle lrwin Bob Jacobs Carlene Kepner John Kidd Joanne Kilcline Suzanne Kilcline Jelene Kile Bob King Page 65 Page 66 Jerry Land Palricia Lang Alberla Languell Maxine Lalla Curlis Lee Roberl Lee Alma Leslie John Lindquisl Richard Linn Hiram Longfellow Arfhur Loy Jim Ludlow Paul Lynch Eslher Mabie Paul Mabrey Vernon Maggarf Myron Maish Doris Maners Roberl Marple Delberf Marq Max Marsh uand Barbara Marlin Roberl' Marlin John Mason John McFarland Thelma McMur+rey Jaclr Meador Grelchen Meyers Roberl Miller Deloris Miller Lowell Morris Pal Morris Palsy Mumaw Roberf Musgrave Alice Myers Jim Myers Mary Helen Miller Virginia Miller Bill Milligan Belly Minor Susannah Milchell Marilyn Moran Marlha Neiheisel Roberl Newlon Shirley N cholson Glenna Noland Phyllis Noland John Nolle Ersilia Pasquali Bob Peeler Madeline Pendergrass Barney Pelly Polly Ann Phillips Nolan Piclcering Tommy Oalrs Mary O'Blenis Richard Olson Cedric O'Neal Annalee Osborn Marilyn Overholser La Wana Piclxefi Evelyn Pinglelon Barbara Pilman Grace Poppas Vv'illiam Powell EvereH Puiney Marilyn Rafferfy Charles Radliff Thomas Raines Bill Rammell Richard Reeves Suzann Reifh Cyn+hia Reynolds Barbara Rhorer Don Richards Bob Ridenour Don Ridlen Phyllis Roberfson Mary Frances Rody Laverne Rool Charles Rose Norma Jean Rose Marilyn Ross Clarence Rosselof Mariy Rouch Mariorie Roush Marilyn Ruddell Grace Rufherford Dillard Savage Lloyd Scherich David Schwierman Donald Sears E. P. Severns Mary Jane Shaffer Elva Shields Beverly Shirley Bob Shirley Rufh Shufflebofham Gene Shucln Jaclz Shufl' Joe Siefers Carl Sildberg Marfha Skinner Peggy Slcogland Jim Slaughfer Dean Small Max Smellzer Donald C. Smifh George Smifh Jack Smifh Paul Roberf Smffh Sherman Smifh Sharon Sorrell Charles Sosbe Paul So++ong Donn Sparks Gladys Spaulding Phyllis Spicer Belly Lou Slahl Fred Sfahl Page 67 Page 68 Ted Slalier Jeannine Slevenson Max Sfewarl Glen Sloclndale Jenny Slockclale Glenn Slorer Louis Sfouf James Slavropulos Arlhur Slreza Mary Jo Sfych Jack Sullivan Lulher Sullivan Charmaine Summers Barbara Sumpier Jack Sullon Richard Swisher Howard Thompson Allen Tomlinson Grace Tompkins Ron Trimble Ann Tull Harry Vaufaw Gene Wagner William Wagner Barbara Walker Anila Wallace Joe Waller Jack Warner Paul Wafkins Glenna Weaver Harry M. Webb Thelma Websler Gene Weir Riia Whaley Joe Wheeler Don While Bob Williams Belly Wlison Roberl' Wilson Carolyn Wilson Glenn Wilson Jacl: Wilson Milfon Wood Virginia Woodmansee Joe Young Palricia Young The Forty - Niners ol KH Official memberships lo lhe Uniled Sophomore Class ol Ki-IS were passed oul lo us 'rhis year when we formally ioined The ranlcs oi lhe in-belrween class ol Kl-lS. As Forly-niners, we discovered lhal high school is noi, ailer all, veiled in myslery and shroud- ed in misl so much as we had lhoughl in our freshman daze, l'r's hard being a Sophomore. We learn 'rhal our mislalces are noi excused as 'rhey were in our green years. While much more was expecled of us, liille was given in recog- nilion . Our lime will come. Rosemary Abbo'r+ Roberl Adams Rosemary Adams Jerry Alexander Barbara Allen Richard Amos Jerry Anderson Norma Anderson Pa+ Anderson Suzanne Applegafe Rulh Ellen Armslrong Roberl Arnold Palsy Aspy Pal Bagwell Jerry Ballan+Ine Roberf Barfholomew Joan Bayer Belly Jane Beaman James Beals Roberi Beck Nadine Bender Alice Berry Paul Berry Donna Besser Evelyn Bcussom Ada Bowland Richard Bowling David Boyce Joan Brabham Roberf Branlley Roberl Brass Ernesf Breckenridge John Breedlove Nancy Bromley James Brown William Brown To Sludenl Council we elecled Jerry Ana- derson, David Criss, Marilyn Chrislie, Rich- ard Farmer, Edwin l-lile, Dave lvlaudlin, Paul Morrow, Marlc Ormsby, Bob Sablolne, Char- lene Smilh, and lvlarlha Thomas. We senl represenlalives lo Girls' League and Boys' Legion. They were Palsy Aspy, Sharon Dwyer, Don Bullon, Bill Fox, and Richard Murphy . The Seniors don'l loolc guile as big lo us now as lhey did lasl year because we lcnow lhal in The very near lulure we'll be lhe Sen- iors Oi l94-9. Page 69 Page 70 Richard Buckner William Buffum Harold Bufium Louis Bunch Cliffon Bunlcley Don Buiion Helen Louise Calhoon Belly Campbell Sherman Carlisle Pafricia Carr John Carver Richard Cassis Paul Caion Roberf Caylor Mary Lou Chaplin Alice Chaplin Phyllis Chenowelh Judy Childs Marilyn Chrisiie Roberf Clarlc Joan Clarlr Richard Clesfer Barbara Cline Mariorie Coady Jackie Cognafa Hugh Collins Cafherine Colvin Viclor Conner Nedra Conwell Palricia Coombs Orval Cowgill Joanne Crafi Don Craig Suzanne Crain David Criss Jean Cunningham Judy Currens Roberf Davenpori Joan Davis Roberr Davis Jean Davison Richard Denman Cllffon DeWiH Jack Diclrason Carolyne Dillings Nancy DimiH Joanne Dixon Don Doak lnealia Dunigan Melba Dunlap Larry Durr Barbara Dufion Richard Dufion Greia Eades Phyllis Eads Harry Easier Cary Ellabarger Roberr Ellioii Eugene EllioH Doroihea Elson Rulh Emery Margarel Erwin Donnabelle Ewen Richard Farmer Jean Farrar Deloris Federspelle Max Ferguson Henry Fewell Richard Filip Richard Fipps Roberl Fisher Leonard Flaly Carol Flora Margarel Forlner Joan Fowler Bill Fox Richard Francais Richard Freeland Joan Frye Earl Gamblin Ramona Garber James Garrell James Gaslrins Nancy Givens Mary Lou Glassburn Jeannelle Glunl Mina Lou Gore Roberl Grams Jaclr Graves George Grecu Belly Zane Grilley Jane Grilley John Gruber Leon Hale Vivian Hale Belly Rulh Hall Deloris Hall James Hall Noranella Hall Palricia Hall James Horn Charles Harmon Kennelh Harrison Norma Harrison Gwennelh Harl Carol Ann Hawk Joan Haywood Joan Healh Doris Hegwood Helen Helms Jeanne Henger Don Henry Rosalen Hess MaDonna Hicks Edwin Highl- Nancy Hill Mildred Hines Peggy Hile Belle Louise Holland Sharon Hollingsworlh Page 71 Page 72 Don Hollis Vivian Hulel Myrna Hoover Roberl Hughes Garnell Hosier Beverly Hooker Jerry Humberf Elizabelh Ann Hummel Harry Huslon June Hufchins Rufh Hufchison James Ingels Rulh lricli La Freda lrwin Sharon Jarrefl Donald Johnson John Johnsfon Wilma Karnes Edward Kaspar Wilde Keilh Peggy Kellar Peggy King Udaieane Kinney Roberl Kirlrendall Sianley Knighls Palsy Kunlz Virginia La Follelle Sue Lamb Sianley Lamb Tom Lanfz William Lawhead William Lawson Roberi Leach Joe Lear Marilyn Lefierl Lloyd Lewis Wilbur Lewis Raloh Livlngslon Roberl Longshore Joan Lowell Margof Maddox Doris Marquand Davis Maudlin Jo Ann Mason Mona Lee Marlin Dan Mar+in Don McCauley Belry McClain John McClin+ich Judy McCormack Mary McCreary Wayne McEl1iresh Judilh McKay James McKee Lorraine McKee William McManama Joan Merrell James Messner Joan Meyers Carl Miller Edward Miller Frances Miller Maud Miller Jack Miller Belly Lee Mills William Mills Tom Milner Harold Milchell William Moberly Alice Moore Paul Moore Eugene Morris Rosalie Morrison Paul Morrow Sharon Moulder Annabell Mugg Joan Mummerl' Riensi Munerol Richard Murphy Janel Myer Donna Myers Bud Nelson Paul Newman Jean Nichols Jean Noble Joan Noble Marcy Nolle Marlene Null Joyce Opperman Mark Ormsby Mary Ormsby Barbara Orion Carolyn Overholrer Jack Overion Jeannine Parker Belly Parkey Helen Parks Palricia Parks Bill Parrish Gene Pearcy Phyllis Pearson Roberl Penlland Colleen Perry Charles Pelers John Phelps Virginia Pierce Roberl' Pickering Jenice Pickering Marilyn Plough Richard Porler Peggy Powell Roberf Poynler Barbara Preslon Sherry Puckeil' Mary Ellen Pyke Donald Ramseyer Max Randall Mary Rayles Gloria Reed Nora Reeves Page 73 Page 74 Wilme:-Ha Resley Julianne Re'Her Grefchen Rice Erma Richey Jaclr RiclreHs Imogene Roark Ann Roberlson Virginia Rodgers Nancy Roll Rufh Rosharough Elizabefh Rose Pafricia Rose Roberi' Sablolne Joseph Schick Margaref Schwall Shirley Schwarfz Richard Seagrave George Roihwell James Rushing Kennefh Rufherforcl Marilyn Rulherforcl Belly Saclls Richard Sandy Shirley Shearer Charles Sheerin Carmen Shine Mary Helen Shoclcley Doris Showalfer Barbara A. Shuck Mariorie Shumalner Carol Shullleworfh Alma Sims Joe Skinner Maurice Sleefh Sharloffe Small Charlene Smifh Harold Smifh L. C. Smifh Olive Rae Smifh Palfy Smifh Ross Smirh Shirley Smi+h William Snow Joan Snow Doroihea Somers Marfha Somers Janef Sparks Ronald Spencer Elizabefh Sullivan Dale Swiharf Roberl' Swing Joan Taylor Roberf Taylor V.c+or Tedlocl: Reafhel Spicer Jack Slahl Leo Sfokes Suzanne Sfilwell Delorise Slriclclefi Niclc Sfreza Mar+ha Thomas George Thompson Dean Timmons Be++y Tinder Be++y Tooley Carolyn Tudor Glenn Umbarger Joe Vandenbosch Pairicia Van Dylr Pai Wall Carl Webb Bill Weichlein Harold Weir Winifred Whaley Marfha Whifacre Ralph Whiieman Marieffa Williams Clarabel W.lson Haroldine Winburn Don Wines Harold Wininger William J. Winlrel Charles Winslow Marilyn Winflancl Harold Wiriclr Emily Wise Rose Marie Wise George Wrighf Mary Wrighlsman Timo+hy Yarling Donna Yerigan Jane+ Young Joan Hoffman Top Row: Give me a liH'le hug. will ya, huh? Jim and Diclc plus converf- able - a la l9l6. BoHom Row: Guess whaf? - a parly. Three queens and no iaclrs. Husfon and fhe Hullabaloo. Page 75 The Wearers of Julie Green ' Don'f pass us by. We don'f rafe mucli now, buf iusf waif a few years. Someday we'll be fhe almighfy Seniors, and fhen . . . Those escalafors fhe Seniors fold us abouf were awfully hard fo find . . . buf we found fhem. Trufhfully, however, many up- perclassmen did give us a helping hand over fhe rough spofs. Buf fime, fide, and high school waif for nobody and our class had ifs dufies foo. We gof our heads fogefher and senf Beffy Bless- ing, Margorie Dill, Ted Efchason, Bob Fague, Page 76 Judy Johnson, l-lelen Joyce, Rufh Lang, Marilyn Bayl, Ed Trobaugh and Verne Wil- liams fo represenf us in fhe Sfudenf Council. To Girls' League Council and Boys' Legion Board of Direcfors wenf Mary Lee Maher, Joan Turner, Bob Babb, Joe Shuclc, and David Liggin as our voice in affairs abouf fhe school. We can feel our deep hue of green, lhow offen we've heard fhe wordl fading a liffle . . . enough we hope . . . so fhaf nexf year we can fake fhaf b-i-g sfep ups ward. We'll be Sophomoresl Arfhur Abell Aileen Adams Delores Airharf James Alexander Nancy Jo Alexander Charlene Andrews Mary Cafherine Arneff Richard Arnold Lorna Arfis Beverly Avery Roberi' Babb James Barneff Dorofhy Bauer Barbara Beaffy Delores Beeler Carolyn Bender Jo Cena Benge Carolyn Benneff Ramona Benneff Max Bess Phillis Bird Be++y Blessing Birdie Bond Max Boone Kafherine Bourne Howard Bowling Marian Bradley Jaclx Browning Wilma Browning Jean Burke Mary Bufler Wanifa Cage i Laura Campbell l Elma J. Carlisle Joyce Carlisle Phyllis Cafon Gene Caylor Ted Chandler Marilyn Charles Merry Ann Chesfer Randall Coffey Don Cole Roberl Cole Pairicia Collier Barbara Conwell Dale Craig Sfanron Cripe Roberf Croddy Mariorie Ann Crowder Lucille Croshaw Juanifa Crosley Don Cufler William Dane Dorcas Day Marjorie Dill Dale Dillman Ralph Dimmil Anna Drago Rufh Duncan Sharon Dwyer Mary Elizabelh Dyer Richard Early Georgia Easler Charles Ealon Elaine Ealon Frank Ellers Eugene Ellis John Ellis Ted Elchason Barbara Evans June Ewing Roberf Fague Berf Fell William Ferguson Paul Fields Arlene Filip Jerry Fisher Donald Ford Ruby For? Barbara Fox Bill Frakes Anila French Emma Lou Fulh Don Gillem Jerry Gillem Bryan Glenn Richard Good James Gourley Virgfnialee Gran? Wilbur Graves Beverly Grau Belly Greengard Parricia Griffifh Sue Gris? JeanneHe Hahn Wanda Hale Page 77 Page 78 Lila Hall Mary Ann Hamlin Lawrence Hankins Rose Mary Hardesly Bobbie Joan Harmon Charles Hardy Donald Harvey Ward Haworlh Shriley Heafhcoal Marilyn Higgins Ralph Holler Clarabell Holman Kennefh Isenogle Judy Johnson Dicln Jones Helen Joyce Edward Keegan Roberf Keilh LoreHa Horn Jo Huffman Mary Hullinger Roberf Humphries Virginia Hunler Richard Husfon Cora Kelley Gene Kelley Joseph Kenner Ben Kendall Palricia Kring Pally Land Joy Ludlow Juanila Lynch Anila Maher Dick Maggarl Jack Malolf Melvin Marcus Rulh Lang Marie Larson Richard Lee David Liggin Irene Loop Lois Loy Belly Marquand Joan Marsh Eugene Marlin Bill Marlin Helen Marlin Joe Marlin Charles Milner Pam Moore Helena Morris Monzelfa Moss Roberla Mummerl Phyllis Napolilano Rosemary Marlin Susanne Mafloch Lee Roy McClory Sarilyn Meisler Rulh Miller Bill Miller Jaclr Neiheisel James Off Jayne Overholser Thomas Parlrey Phyllis Parr Julia Peck Don PEelel' Barbara Pickering Beulah Poppas Jim Porter Marlene Rabafeau Carol Rayl Juanffa Richman Alene Riddle Vera Roberis Richard Rose Joan Rouse Linda Roush Marilyn Rayl Phyllis Rayl Suzanne Rea Jaclr Reirh Jerry Renshaw Jim Riclrels Thomas Runyon Audrey Sallee Paul Schafer Charles Scheid Marilyn Schlemmer Mary Schorm George Shooln Wayne Showalfer Joe Shuclc Richard Shuclx Wilbur Slabaugh Rex Smelfzer Roberf Smifh Ronald Smifh Jerry Snyder Gene Schory George Schrader Dixie Ann Scoff Zelma Seal Tom Shenlr Claris Shepard Mary Lee Somers Mary Soffong James Spencer B.ll Sfoolcsbury James Sfouf Arlene Summers Doro+hy Sfalrelbeclr Loreifa Sfreavel Sharon Sweaf Kennefh Spencer Richard Sfamps Marjorie Spicer Reber? Sfemler Gurney Stephens Mary Ellen Slewarl' Page 79 Page 80 Mariha Taylor Nancy Taylor Elizabefh Teel Marlene Thoringion Don Tenbrook Delores Timme Jael: Toney Shirley Trimble Edward Trobaugh Gary Tunison Jo Ann Turner Viola Tyler Golby Uhlir Barbara Waddell Dale Waggner Bonifa Walker Carolyn Walker Peggy Wafson Bonnie Warner Norma Weaver Mary Wesl' Sarah Wesf Lorecla While Fred Whiied Verne Williams Duane Wilson Mariorie Wilson Palsy Winegardner Mona Winiland Harry Woodward John York Doyle Wyriclc David Young Helen Young Jean Zimmerer Sarah Jane Hulef Top row: Ten men and fhree women. Wow! Liz, Joy, and Joanne Boliow row: Johnson, Under- wood, and Webb pracficing whai they preach? Napoleon? . . . No, iusf Severns. ' Heppy Joe's a friendly QUY' 65:7 'N I Top row: lleff +0 righll Hey, wl1af's on Tom's mind? Third row: All right Sfripey, blow Red and Blues l10i' Off the press. Coclrrgaches 1 'nuff said, O'm5bY and Swing hldln' Undef 5 Pal' of HBHOPS- Edris, Barb, and Carolyn and fhree big smiles. Sm.le 'For me, gals. Second row: Quofe -1Tl'ie lnsfi+u+ion -- unquofe. Bollom 'Dwi Vllamlns al lhe bookslore' Zoog, flue +error. Where's flue camera, Jack? Beg foo+ fo,-ward' eh' Pai, Four queens are hard lo beat Sfompin'ai'fl1e Korner. Bones and Barney . . . ouf for fraclx, loo? -Q AX -Eg F! Page 81 r Y! WIX 'Wi .- WN..-...,. Q Y X K 1 HQ ff' H 4, -. f:-mm-4 . ,Q 1 1 H 1 sy V 5 f A f lair li 1 1! Page 83 'n QW! Wm: Page 84 W , f- ' M ' - 55134 ig. I 2 K A e C 1OSC a weetheart an MIRIAM SHOWALTER STARDUST BALL SWEETHEART El JACQUELINE RICHCREEK JUNIOR-sENloR PROM QUEEN Queen which goes to show that Pg85 a . . I1 iigugar and splce and everytlung 111ce - Every girl in high school is proud To belong To The Girls' League, organized by Miss EsTella G. Pearce when she TirsT became Dean oT Girls. AuTomaTically every girl in high school is a member when she enTers and has The privilege oT aTTending The meeTings ThaT are held abouT once a monTh in The audiTorium. Besides having several inspiraTional spealrers aT special sessions, The League has carried ouT several proiecTs, The girls gaThered cloTh- ing To send To The poor and needy children oT KenTuclcy. DiligenTly They sold holly and misTleToe in Dean Pearce's oTTice. WiTh every Tu- berculosis campaign, They sold T. B. bangles upTown on SaTurdays. The Council oT The League is composed oT oTTicers and a repre- senTaTive Trom each class. They were Dolores Johnson, presidenTp Marilyn Newby, vice-presidenT1 Twila STacl4lebecl4, secreTary-Treasur- er: Phyllis Curlee, 4f-X: Janice Taylor, 4B7 Nancy Adams, 3l6XIl.OiS6f1I'1G Barker, 3Bg Marilyn ChrisTie, ZA: PaTsy Aspy, QB: Sharon Dwyer, IA' and Jo Ann Turner, IB. i . GIRLS' LEAGUE COUNC!L Back row: Joan Turner, Marilyn Chrisfie, Mary Lee Maher, Janice Tay- lor, Palsy Aspy, Phyllis Curlee, Nancy Aclams., Loisanne Barker, Sharon Dwyer. Sealed: Twila Sfalrelbecln, Mar lyn Newby, Beverly O'Reair. W., X 'fn-n ...L-.f 'mf , ge 86 lghalis what KHS gif S are ma e o . HONOR GIRLS Back row: llefl' lo righllz Barbara K o h n, Miriam Showalfer, Marilyn Hicks. Fif+h row: Pal' Carrolhers, Barbara Conwell, Rulh Lou se Hedrick, Mary Kohn, Barbara Kirlrpal- r'ck, Marilyn Moran, Jean Jones, Joanne Willse. Fourlh row: lola Loop, Mar- ilvn Newby, Ramon Croddy, Charmaine Suw- mers, Virginia McClam- :-o:h, Barbara Dullon, Desma Krhin, Belly Lou Highf. Third row: Alberla Lang- uell, Barbara lrby, Belly Hickman, Emily Wise, Anna Janel' Cain, Phyllis Cwrlee, Grace Tompkins, Peggy Slrogland, Joan Kraner. Second row: Donna Niebar- ger, Virgina Herr, Mar- lha Berry, Shirley Hen- riclrs, Clara Emily Clif- ford, Marilyn Ellis, Mary Louise Heacly, Marjorie Hunneshagen. Fronl row: Marjorie Goudy, Beverly O'Reair, Doroihy Bauer, Phyllfs McCauley, Nancy Adams, Barabara Eades, Marilyn Richey. Noranelle Hall, Marjorie Herr. Noi in picfurez Dolores Johnson, Beverly Shirley, Janice Taylor, Marfha Thomas. The big evenl inlhe Girls' League is lhe Molher-Daughler Re- ceplion. Early This spring girls who had served lhe school and com- munily and who had been oulslanding in leadership, characler, and sociabilily were recommended by The lacully. Laler lhis lisl was screened, and names ol Those girls believed lo be lruly oulslanding were placed on a plague +o hang permanenlly in lhe Dean's office as a reminder and inspiralion lo olher girls. Besides, lhese girls were also honored al lhe Receplion, where Their names were firsl announced. While accomplishing Jrasks around lhe school, lhe League is achieving ils goal ol making lhe girls ol Kl-lS beiler specimens ol .fomanhood for lhe lulure. Page 87 course, you Qnow what KHS boys Realizing The needs Tor an organizaTion which would include all high school boys, Dean Jones organ- ized The Boys' Legion in I939. This Legion has proved iTselT indispensable, as iT reTlecTs The Thinlcing oT all The boys in The school. The Legion sponsors Two annual evenTs, The l-lul- labaloo and The STardusT Ball. The NinTh Annual STardusT Ball was held March 2I, wiTh Miriam ShowalTer reigning as SweeThearT. Through The planning and hard work OT The chairman, Jim WhiTe, and his commiTTees, The aTTair was a suc- cess. The aTTendanTs danced under a canopy oT lan- Terns To The music oT Grady James. The l-lullabaloo, which was presenTed Two nighTs This year, was a combinaTion oT comedy, music, age 88 BOYS' LEGION BOARD OF DIRECTORS Baci: row: William Rammell, Joe Bef-- neche, John PlaH, Tom Craig, Bud' Jones, Corwin Husion, Dean J. P. Jones. Middle row: Dick Murphy, David Cowell, Joe Smifh, Bill Fox, Don BuTTon, Harry Webb. Froni row: Nelson Babb, Joseph Shuclr, Roberl' Babb, David Liggin. Jim Wh.Te, chairman of The Sfardusf Ball, and Tom Noble, chairman of Hulla- oo, discuss plans for The Boys' Legion year. HIC I113, C O STARDUST SWEETHEARTS Top Bacl: Row: lLefl lo Rigl1+l- Guenevere Hancocln, Marilyn Rud- dell, Mr. O. M. Swilwarl, Nancy Bromley, Marilyn Moran, Marlha Berry. Fronl' row: lna Sue Crocs, Miriam Showaller, Dennis Sheerin. Boflomz Dancers llmronged l'l'1e 'floor al flue Slardusf ball. dancing, and special acls. Tom Noble was llwe general chairman, Mrs. Mildred Kern was llie lacully adviser, and ner assislanls were Miss Nelda Sliowaller, Mr. Kennellw Croolc, Mr. Malwlon Mercer, and Miss Mary Faussel. All ol llwe prolils collecled lrorn llwese evenls go lo llwe Boys Legion lreasury lo be used lor various Legion proiecls and ollwer worllwy scliool needs. Lasl year llie Legion purchased a new spolliglwl lor use in The au- diloriurn. Tlwis year llwe Legion was direcled by Joe 'fmillm presidenlg Bud Jones, secrelaryg -lon: Craig, lreasurer, and Jolfm Plall, sergeanl- ai'-arms, wlfmo were assisled by a Board ol Di- reclorsiconsisling ol lwelve represenlalives elecled from llwe four classes. llwere was one represenlalive from eaclfi mid-lerm class and lwo from eacl1 ol llwe ollwer classes. Page 89 Gut ST:ucIenT Npowers TI1aT ben and The PresidenTs oT homerooms, oT The Junior and Senior classes, Girls' League and Boys' Legion consTiTuTe The STudenT Council, gov- erning body oT KI-IS. WiTh Miss DoroThy Ihornburgh as TaculTy adviser, The Council published The LENS and sponsored I-lello Weelc. Besides TeaTuring movies and mu- sic during The lunch periods, The Council es- Tablished a TradiTion by placing a ChrisTmas Tree in The TronT hall during The ChrisTmas season. AlThough The club program was deTiniTe- ly sliced To pracTically noThing This year, The OrganizaTion Board slcillTully regulaTed The consTiTuTions, enTrance requiremenTs, and The several oTher phases oT club acTiviTies. The Board was elecTed by The STudenT Coun- cil aT The beginning oT The year. BuT wiThouT The help oT The TaculTy advisers, iTs various duTies could noT have been so successTully accomplished. The club program may be resumed again nexT year. STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS Lefi To righT: Joan Kraner, secrefary K ge 90 ORGANIZATION BOARD STandIng: IIe'fT To righfl Nelson Babb Bud Jones, Mr. Kennefh Crook. CI1risTie, Miss Rulh Campbell. honoraries played important parts in KHS Characler, leadership, scholarship, and service . . . high slandards ser by lhe l-lonor Sociely. Aside from lhe annual lea and banguef, new robes were boughr by The Sociery for use in Jrhe inilialrion held in April. Misses l-lelen Ross, Nelda Showaller, Dorolhea Pohlman, Messrs. Earl James, Rob- erf Barngrover, and Edson Van Dorn advised lhe Sociery Jrhis year. The Quill and Scroll sociely is an inferna- Jrional honorary organizarion for high school iournalisls who have accomplished oulsland- ing worlc on a high school publicalion and have been approved by Jrhe Nalional Schol- aslic Press Associarion. l-laving been organized during 'rhe IQ43- IQ44 school year, lhe Kokomo l-ligh School chaplrer was named aller Roberl Coughlin, a graduale of Kl-lS in l932, who is now an as- sociale ediror ol Life magazine. HONOR SOCIETY Back row: lleff fo righil Marilyn Hicks, Bll B h Third row: lola Loop, Tom Roseberry, Virginia Mcclamroch. Second row: Barbara Eades, Barbara Irby, Nancy Adams. Mary Kohn, vice-presidenfg Miriam OUILL AND SCROLL Sfanding: llefi fo rigl'i+l Bud Jones, vice- presidenh Tom Roseberry, president Bill Bugher, secrefary. :I 'f'3'!-., NATIONAL HONOR SOOETY S 3 fiix W5 lj IHSHSJ 11 liTe as We Nprome11adeoln on a luig niglljc ResponsibiliTy number one Tor The Junior Class is The presenTaTion oT The Junior-Senior Prom. Anna JaneT Cain and Jim Meyers, as co-chairmen, shouldered The assorTed prob- lems oT ways and means Tor The Prom. Un- der Their supervision, The c:ommiTTees suc- ceeded in giving The Senior Class a Truly ouTsTanding . . . and long remembered . . . going away parTy. IT was cerTainly an oc- casion we will never TorgeT. MONITOR CAPTAINS Back row: Jean Holman, Marilyn Hicks, secreTaryg Jack Freh. Pafsy Aspy, Virginia Herr. Fron+ row: Russell Adair, Clarence Rosselol, James Beals. No? in picTure: Marjorie Herr, Roland Ahlbrand, Glenn Um- barger. ConTusion in The halls and any oTher dis- Turbance which Tends To inTerrupT sTudy in PROM COMMITTEE Top row: lleff To righfl William Gloyeg Jim Myers, co-chairman. FourTh row: Jack Croddy, RoberT Frank. Third row: James Ferguson, Helen Edwards, Paul Lynch . Second row: Anila Faullrner, Anna JaneT Cain, co-chairman, Mabel Brown, Carl Sildberg, Joe Wal- Ter. FirsT row: AlberT Languell, Ra- mona Flora, Rosemary Dens- born, Jacl: Childs. vision oT Mr. Ed Phillips and his Tac:ulTy aids. Each period a moniTor capTain and assisTanT The class rooms are prevenTed by The mem- check pass slips, conTrol hall lighTing, and col- bers oT The moniTor sysTem, under The super- Page 92 lecT aTTendance slips. and Sent our Tuture politicos To Purdue. LasT Tall ouTsTanding sTudenTs Trom high schools all over Indiana wenT To l.aTayeTTe To The Purdue l.egislaTure, where They sTudied and pracTiced legislaTive procedure. The Senior Class OT Kl-IS elecTed Tive sTudenTs To aTTend This meeTing. These, Bill Bugher, Bar- bara KirlcpaTricl4, Dolores Johnson, Ted Tee- garden and Joe SmiTh, were accompanied by lvliss LiliTh Farlow, speech Teacher. We were greaTly honored when Dolores Johnson received honorable menTion as one oT The ouTsTanding members. PURDUE LEGISLATORS LeTT To right Ted Teegarden, Bill Bugher, Barbara Kirkpafriclt, Joe Organized in l94I To aid in The newly Tormed visual educaTion deparTmenT, The OperaTors Club renders one oT The greaTesT services To The school. ATTer passing cerTain TesTs, club mem- bers are given cards cerTiTying Their pro- OPERATORS CLUB Lefi To righf: John Lindquisf, James Sfavropulos, Roberf El- lioTT, Jack Croddy, James Myers, Bari' Porfer, William Dufendach. Joe Berneche, Edgar Garberh R.chard Freh. AT machine: William Gloye. Ticiency as operaTors. They give many hours oT Their Tree Time To operaTing proiecTors, and perTorming numerous oTher duTies. Many oT The Tilms are shown in The pro- iecTion room, ZIZA, under The supervision oT Miss Fay Cover. Pug Lacly Wi11dCIH1CI6 is To be complimented Don'T you wanf The world To Talre you seriously, Lord Darlington? LighTs . . . curTain . . . acTionl The play is iusT beginning! WhaT play? The play puT on by The Kl-lS DramaTic Club enTiTled Lady Windermere's Fan was wriTTen by Oscar Wilde. lT was an English drama which Toolc place in London, England. The main characTers were Lord and Lady Windermere who, by misundersTanding and jealousy, were driven aparT, buT as The play progressed They were broughT TogeTher again and all Their diTTiculTies were ironed ouT. This was iusT one oT The several plays puT on by The DramaTic Club This year. Several one-acT plays were presenTed. They were: l-lome Tor ChrisTrnas and DynarniTe Dan. Pg 94 Tliese one-acT plays were direcTed by sTu- denT members oT The club. The club was headed by some very indusTrious sTudenTs. They were as Tollows: Dick GarnraTh, presi- denT1 Carolyn Mohr, vice-presidenT: Mary Louise T-leady, secreTary7 Bud Jones, Treas- urerg and George Calhoon, sergeanT-aT- arms. These plays iusT couldn'T have been pro- duced, Though, wiThouT The direcTion oT Miss Nelda ShowalTer and her assisTanT, Mrs. Mil- dred Kern. As always, The DramaTic Club has proved iTs worThiness in enTerTaining The sTudenTs oT KHS and The Kolcomo public. on ier e11Jcer1cai11ing louse party. We all Mrs. Erlynne. Lady Windermere . Parker .,..,,,,,..,, , Lord Darlinglon , The Duchess of Berwick Lady Aga+ha Carlisle Lord Windermere Mr. Dumby Lady Sluifield , . Mrs. Cowper-Cowper , Lady Jedburgh Mr. Hopper Lord Auguslus Lorfon Mr. Cecil Graham Lady Plymdale , Mrs. Earlynne Rosalfe CAST OF CHARACTERS .Virginia McClamroch ,,,,Leroy Barron ,,Wayne Tash ,.Mariorie Hunneshagen , H . Edris Jo Pearce Dick Gamrafh , , ,, Joe Waller: ., Mary Louise Heady Jean Holman Marilyn Moran Bud Jones ,Corwin Husfon ,Tom Keyes Loisanne Barker , Carolyn Mohr Phyllis Roberlson Page 95 Kokomo l-ligh Schools band, under Thr clirecTion oT Mr. lviahlon Iviercer, consisTs oi approximaTely TiTTy sTudenTs. The band has been very aciive This year by parTicipaTing in several muscial programs, climaxed by The iourfcTiy TesTival aT LogansporT on April 25. This music TesTival, revived This year Tor The iirsT Time since The war, has been held listened W len MAJORETTES, COLOR GUARD, DRUM MAJOR Back row: llefi' To righT, Bill Abrams, Dick Olson, Glenn Arneff, Charles Harmon, Jack FreT1. Ffonf row: Twila Stakelbeck, Janice Taylor, Dorofhy STakelbeclc, Virginia GranT, Barbara MarTin, Jean John- son. annually aT one oT The Tour parTicipaTing ciTies . . . Peru, LogansioorT, Marion, or Ko- Homo. OTTicers were chosen again This year To lead The band. They Took care oT any admin- isTraTive duTies Tor The organizaTion. The six maioreTTes wiTh Their Twirling baTons and blue and whiTe ouTTiTs added BAND MEMBERS Sianding Tleif To r,ghTl Bob Caylor, Mr. Mahlon Mercer, Carolyn Wilson, Jim STouT, Tim Yarling, Don Johnson, Bob EllioH. Fourfh Row: LoreTTa STreavel, Ross SmiTh, EvereH PuTney, Roberf HosTeTler, Glen Sioclrdale, Don SmiTh, Bob Brown, Jack STouT, Ida Craig, Glen DeWiH, Donn Sparks, Edward Sievens, Norman Kerr, John Kennedy, Wayne McElTresh, Bill Moberly, Carl Sildberg, Don Woodward. Third Ron: Palricia Kring, Don Doalr, Roberfa HuTTo, Glen- wood Davis, Torn Keyes, Wayne Tash, Ronald Trimble, Q is 4, w, QA Y K K, V5 Q, 4 r 'K Y E Q ! -' 5 5 nw: fafxxg I Q X 1' Q V . fi ' K ' R+ Y' N. 1 T J . , .. yr Vs A 'Lk K my ,Q K . 4 , 4 H , , J -.V J W 5 ,K M , 'K 'X Z MY 6 Qi f ' Xxt'VM'J s.'.'x W6 'QS- ' 1 U , , ,K it x4 ,. J ,A 1 F S Q 4 1 and The c'1oir sent notes To us. Back Row: Sfanley Lamb. Sixfh Row: EvereTT PuTney, Carl Johnson, Jerry Anderson, Bob Wilson. FiTTh Row: RolJerT Webb, Edwin Highf, Joe Skinner, Gene Pearcy, Allen Tomlinson, Bill Bugher, Bill Parker. Fourfh Row: Joe Walfer, David Drinkwafer, Charles Harmon, Roberl' Frank, William Parrish, Maurice SleeTh, Jerry Alex- ander, John Lind. Third Row: Marjorie Hunneshagen, Joan Morrison, Carolyn . . and so l'm waiTing Tor The man l love. These Tamiliar sTrains and many oThers iusT as beauTiTul can be heard coming Trom The music room where The Tfligh School Choir is Tound every sixTh period pracTicing dili- genTly Tor Their nexT perTormance. This year The choir had TorTy-nine mem- bers. lTs oTTicers were Bob Webb, presi- denTq Barbara Eades, vice-presidenT, Bob Wilson, Treasurer. Under The capable direc- Tion oT Miss Mary A. l:auseTT and accompan- ied by Rosemary Adams and Carol l-lawk, The choir perTormed Tor various programs. Among Them were Their TradiTional ChrisT- mas ConcerT, The Boys' Legion l-lullabaloo, Page 98 Tudor, Rosemary Adams, Barbara DuTTon, Marilyn Seiber- ling, Virginia McClamroch, Beverly Perkins, Carol Jean Mc- Kinney. Second Row: SharloTTe Small, BeTTy Hickman, Fanny Heine- mann, MargareT WrighT, Marilyn Overholser, Phyllis Cur- lee, Nancy CaroThers, Barbara Rhorer. Fronf Row: Loisanne Barker, Peggy King, Margof Maddox, Mary CaTherine CarTer, Carolyn Mohr, BefTy Lou HighT, Carol Hawk, Marfha Thomas. Direding, Miss Mary A. Fausset BaccalaureaTe, and The Spring ConcerT. Their singing was done mosTly a capella. The year The QcTeT consisTed oT: Loisanne Bar- ker and Carolyn Mohr, sopranos: Barbara Eades and Joan Morrison, alTosy EvereTT PuT- ney and John Lind, Tenorsq Bob Webb and David DrinlcwaTer, basses. We had Two very ouTsTanding members This year who sang several dueTs: Loisanne Barker and John Lind. Their harmony was Truly lovely and was enjoyed by all who heard iT. This indusTrious group owes Their perTec- Tion To Miss FauseTT who has so diligenTly sTriven To malce The choir whaT iT is Today. Hercule solved the KST-TK Nlysteryf' 46-47 1.5 QQ i xx-5-Q f xxlixu l I S i 43.0 a . T ,riurfa Q , rQ 1 X, U Q 1 ukgilyi -M l ii ll' The LENS, which is sponsored by rhe Sludenl Council, is parlicularly valuable lo new sludenls in Kl-lS, Tor il conrains Tacls concerning school acrivilies. We all remember Hercule l-lolmes and Dr. Wharson in The Case of 'rhe Passing Pupil, The Theme of Jrhis year's LENS. Their amusing anlics in rhe halls and class- rooms ol Kokomo l-ligh School lcepl' us reading on and on unlil we had gone from cover ro cover. Under The able supervision of Miss Dorolhy Thornburgh, we found rhar Tom Noble, edilor-in-chief, and Ted Teegar- den, business manager, accurarely pre- dicred a bigger and belrer l94-6-I947 LENS. Our appreciarion and enioymem' of Jrhe originaliry displayed in rhe LENS was reilecled in The record-breaking sale of ISOO copies. LENS STAFF Sfandingz flef+ fo righfl Tom Nobl M Dorofhy Thornburgh, Ted Teegarden. Si'Hing: Ellwood Lewis, Edgar Garberf, Joe Berneche, Carolyn Mohr, Beverly Wiebers, Jean Jones, Edris Jo Pearce, Loisanne Barker, Clara Emily Clifford, Bill Bugher, Richard Gamralh. Pg 9 Il and lu Vol. 25 - No, 'I Kokomo. Indiana. lfrulay, February T. IQ47 Five cents Juniors nose out seniors in close scholastic race SIIIIIIIIIAII IIIIIII Il.,II IIII- IIIIIIIIII ...III IclIoIIIIrI. IIIIIIIIII IIII IIII- IIIIIII III ..I.I.I..' .II...I...,. II.-.,...I 'II..I I.......I. had Iwcmy III. I.IIII.Ir .I.I.IrnII, wlIIII' ......-.I ......I III III. I .I.I..- wnh I.-....Iv-IIIIII IILIIII rIIII.lren. ....I ... ....III-.. ....I .I.I..-I .I...I...I., lI.III.II ...II .I .II IIIIIUIII. SI-III.II. '-.I-I l-II-.I ll.I.IIII-. I1....I.v, .....I ,I.......- I'...I..I IXIII IIIIIIIII I M.I....I.sI......II.-. I.'. II, v....I.... r.1.f'I...II....I., II.II.I... NI.- II...,..I, M,...I... Is .,i. I .. w.III..I 7..II ...... I-I..II...I.. III.. ...I I..I.....I.. I..'I xI....I...I ll: II.-... I..I.....II., II..I..I.I ...II.I., II..I.. II.I...II....... I... In-.III.I..-, M...II... III...-4 .I.... I2I...I. .'I.fI.-I.I, II... I.I...I, r...I. III... III., AI..I.I. m..II.... If.III. I.. I-.-....I .....I IfII,II.. I.I.r'.I.I.I I.....I.I.. I.. III... II....I.I. ll- IL.-IIIIIII 'wII.II.. ...... wIII llIIsIIIII IIN IXI.IrI.IIII- Anna jnun I III., S.If.IIIII Iy ll.-l.-II. All-I-.I.I I.III,I.. l.III.l AlIlhr.IIIII 'II III II II lIIII.'II dn.-II, l'III II.-IIIII .II IIIII.-II l.Iv.I.II.I.. M...II II..I......., LII... II...-, 'II.III.II..I llnunh, Gunn- IIIIIIIIIIIII, llwu .wnl.lI. MIIrIIIrIa An..-II ..II.I I IIIIIIIII. IK,.rl.I-I S.Ipl.III...II.I. -I... III ' I.-III ll... lnnrina- 4.x's ,l.IIIv .XII.I.-.I.III, ll. I. II flnlhoon, RI.hIII.I l .II III.w.,NIIII. R.III.--, l'ilIzalIerlI RI... f'II..II.II..I SI.IIIII '.I II . II.-If.. sI....II.-. I.....-I .I.....,I II.I.- sw.I....I, I:I.....I.I xI'.I..... II..I.-I- .I ...I.., ....I cI...II... I I..I....... :... III R.I.II..I.Iy A.I...I... I..I. ..xI........I.. v....y AIM. Ip.-II III.II.II. II...II.I.I I-I.. III.., Bnh cg..yI.I., II..I. vI..I..I,.III II..... TIInm.Ins. aI..I l...I.I 5I.IIIIII..II' l'rI-ahmrn 0.I'u, Ih lrru 'S III- EI: III..-III.-.II IIII.....,., -I..II... II..-. r.I.I.IIII II.I.II. II...I.I.I. I..I.....III. ,I..I.. Pan. s.....I.... fp...-.-, In..II..,. xI...II. ..I..I II.II.-I. III... I.I..,I llw II.II..II.., II...II, II..I. lS..I-II, ...-.II .:..II..I, II..II.I. II......I. M... ....I II...I.I.... .....I I,I.....I ......III Hello week is genlal success II..I.I.,I II... ...-.I. ... .I....I...-. I' II. .....I...I. ....II I.II..I.... II...-I..I,.....I ... II.. .I.......I II.II.I w..I. ......II... llcllo ...-.III. ....Jn II... ...II.......II .II II.. sII..I.I.. c'....... .I II... II.-... II.I.1 ..I......IIy I... .I I......I..-. ... ...... I... ,I..II...I.- .I I.. .I..I....I.I..I III. .II..I.....- .II ...-... II..-IIA. ....I I..-Iv .-.I.-..I- II. I...-......... I..III.II ....,.........-.I sI...I.I.... ......,.I.I.I. II.-II.. ...... 'r..,. II... .III.I.I......I I.. II... I....I.. ummm 'l'IIrn.l.II I' II I. clnxx I.-I I-III-.I I cllfllrenl IIIIIIY wIIlI IlII- wIII.l llI IIII' .In nn: aide und Ihr :Inu .In IlII- IIIIII-r O.. .hm II... .I...I..I..I ..,II.....-.I II... aurographa of IlIvII .I.I.-.I..III- .II..I Ieachua Alla on TIII-1.l.Iy .I s.'rnnIlIlI-Il II.InI.-I roman was held In IIIII IIum.-mum. Afrn unncramblmg Ihr nnIneII, :III dum procurad Ihc varmur nIgIIaIIIrI-I o.. W.I.I.....I..y ......IIN ......... ..-... pruvudcd for Ihr rnyoymrru of the aiudlntl Thu wm II humoroux :wry wIIh blank: Io he filled wnh v.IrI.IIn laachu'a nan-Iu. ' D. D, play climaxn Hello weak Climaling Hello veal was the Dm man: Dabs' pmducuon TwII.ed Angles, which was givan in Ihr and. mrium Thundly and Friday. Alu: on Thursday and Fnday In :ommemorn lion of Franklin Delano RImwvIIlr'I 'hinhdah January 30, anorher conuu vu plovddmd. Suulznu procurrd rhe dgntuno of persona vhoae laxr namu bags: qirb Iha Ieuen in Roonvclfn nada. - The aureus of Halln veal: was due to tha dom and cooperation nf Ilu 'u-Il- ....L ....-::..-, -414 I. -. :-I Congratulations Bud Mrs. Quill' and . croll NII-I lI.I:IL hf.I:II. ll.-.I .IIIH War' ..I.II.Ir ..-..I..I.- II... III.I.I.- I I..II.IIfI .II II.. Ig..IlI ....A s.I.III s.I..I-I. -- II.. II.II...- I .....I.I.... cI....I.. ll-III IIIIII-I. :II.- II.II.II.I. II.. .I.I- l1'.I.I III.I ILIIII, Ie..-II.-.I .I ..:1. In... x. I-II..-...-... I......I.II.f. .4I....' II. - .I ..II.I s...III ss. .mv ......... .I ...I III... .I IIIIIIIIQIII .II II... Inu.-II II.: I.....II. ,..iII.r.I. ..I .hr KIIIIIIIII. .I..III ....I .-...I....I.,, .I ....I...I-IIIIIII. ...III I.-I II.. III.. Irs.. .II.II 5I.II.I,I II.. ...I III.. I II'I'..- ...IS .IIw.-.vs III- IzI.I.I ..I .I .....-... ......III ...III II... I.. ..II..I.....I.. .III.IIr. .If IIIII Ilmpwr ,III-I I.. I.II.I'II .ny .II. ......I III I.II.I..,IIIf.III -I. I I I. lI.I.II TI.. Ig....I ......I s....:I s.....II. -. . .II.III.I:I.IIII,g IIIIIII s.lI.I.II I.-IIrnI.'w I II-II I-... II... III-er. I.II..I hcw Il... w... I. II III. iI.I.i ...I ...lII..I. Faculty in shape I I ,,.. I after much ii. II:I-... II.. ...... III.-...IMI III.- II..-IIIII.IIs .II III.- Y.'II'IIlIy, lnIII' III Ilm IwpIIII.II..' .If cha' Nll frnvnrsicf Uulllmr IIIInn. I-pur.III.III. IIIII Is 'ull fIcI l, 'vlr ...Ir IIIIIII I.n.III.I..IIII.I. M.-. was .ubwnz from srhual for fIIlI day In Iwenrv years, :In snack of InIesIII'IzIl uma of influenza were: lard, who was ill Mm Esrella Pearce. III lor four days. Min In-nn Rufry school for six wceh .If :ha Ihroar. She remix haven'I changad much. I I.-w new voungxrera. bul n gn . m..I.Iw olhrra ara ull! in my clam: ll'm glad In bf. baclf and hope Io may unnl rhe and of :he school year. ' Min Elizabeth Mtlntuslu il bark af- Ier one year of leave of' absence, due rn an attack of pneumonia. She has hun mined by bath uudenn and fnnnlou Jani... L.: illnpaa .nl -ll -.ra N its first issue staff edits AI Ilu- free-III Rui and Bin. II..Ii Imrw wl.II.I. was III-Id .II :he I-....nc .It 'ormer 'I.i.I.Ir Tnm Rnseberry. MI- .H M 5..I.I..III. IIIIIIIIIIII-mi.-III .II ....II I... I.-I..I..II, .-....,......I..Q.I II.. ......I .1.iII.I. III.III.'f, Bud Janes. .Incl .IIE .III ...Im ......II .I.........I...I I.II..II. II. c.III'yIII.IwIIIvd Ihr- .wld IIIIIIIIIIIII .Ind EInIII..IsI statin .III .he IIIIII w.I.I. Ivlmch .Iwv IIIIII dam- .II.r.IIg .hw IIIIII II-nwxrw .IIIII I.-Ish.-Il IIII- II.-I.. swf? ..I.+.rIlI.rI. IL.I.I.'I Incl. In Ihmr nrxr IIIIIIII-sIer's II-.II-I. M. II... sI..I..II.I, I....I...I., ....II ......... .I...I.,.r...I.-....-.I II., ...II .III .. ...II ....II .I.I...I ....I ......nz II.I....I III...-., fs.. ......Iv .-II...-.I I.I.I.I..-... .........,I.. ..IIII......,. s...I..I. I.....I...III, :I very pIIuspmn..a sen..-Iver TI... III IIII- hrs. .IdIII.In ..I III.. RI-J .Ind BI... pI.IbIIIIhe.I hy IIIII :ww nal? They hngw .Inu 'rv I-an p.II I.. pr:-I. I I.IIwI.IaIIer - uII.'Ie A .II KH5 W .III QI. IJIII .'nI.I. Hullabaloo acclaimed on opening night Never :I dull moment found in current hit perform.uIce 'I'I......II-I.I.I. ..III.I......- IIll.I.I II.. lil Is .I..d.wrII..I. 'l'lI..rfI.l,II- IIIIQIII. l'III.III.IfI I., .II .he III.nI f.IIII..I.. :III .III II... Iam II..II..Is..I.I.. TI.. I..gI. I.-I.. I.II I.1I..II QIIIIII .II-.II.f.I ... II.. IIII- III...-II IIII ..hI.'I. IIIII I:.IsI had II.I...I.I Yes. IIII- ..I..I.I IQ... .I I..-.II.I..I. I .III-III-II Ira... ....rf I.. IIrI..I. MI.. .. II..I.....I.. .-xI..... ...-... I..-.I.......I.I I..IaI......I sIII.1g.eII, I.nIII I-III.-.II 'II. show Izarr.-A. :IIIII .II II.-Iw.QI-II ..... T.-.I Te.Ig.IrII.-.I was Ir..I. I.r.TII.III. .II ....wwf nl .I-IvIIIIoII..-s Nl:-I I:..IIk Cain, ers to reception I....I. cis... ...III ....I I-II... he-en clxuacn as Iht- IIN' r.- e IIIIIIIII-I.-III... ....III- Imn. fins was relcns-fd III- MI-I I..-I-.II lrgg, .Inv .II .hr Ip.IIIs.IIw .I' Ilu- III.. .or clan. .-...... Im... .. I I.I.,......I..... ...II.I.I..I ... Ik... yearn ......... .-II.. Is. ...IIS I..-an chose.. .I-. .In.- III' III. IIIIIIIII I III Ilw S.Irg:Iss.I sI,III SEI. II I :III-rIIIIeI .If IIII- IIIIIII ...In-ni Im-Id, Red J-III BIIIII sI..Il. .Ind Is .III .IIxm,aIII I-I.-......I MII-IIIIII IIIII ..I..-mi ......I II... ...III I.......I .-......... II. Ichnnl. .lwores pan' .II hu Irma In ..,.I.I.s.I.IIr..I ...III II.-- O...-.fnIIIrI' .IIIEI II. ......II JIJA. HI. II ..II.Il.I..-Ii ... III.- 1-.-.-I'.-.-. I-.III.pI..e... IJ.I.pIIm..I.... J.I.. II nr .ha prvwnr eIIr.III.-Il In .hr .garn- .-I.Il course. The .Io-chIIIIrnIen. ....III Ihen' flnsa .p.I.Iwrs, have .IIIn.IImccd IIIIII Ilwy wnll ciImI:Ie rhe .mwzhairnxexx of Ihr cnII.I.I.Iu.ws at :I mcerumg next Mon day Thcy amd Ilml :he fnllowm.: .I.IIII.mILIveI wnuld he unvrl for che rcI I-I-pIIan. Th.-y aw: ITII-.'oraIIIIn, en..- IIIIIIII-wm, invnrauon, queen, pI.IgInn'II .s....IIaI.,I, .I..I,.I....., and ..f..II....I-... .III:ImIrwI'a AI Inner In.-crIngs mr um-.II.III-Im-rx. AI... ,I..I... ....I I..... ... ....I,..-......... ....I. Ihr.. ......I...II.I.. ....II I.I..I. II.. ......ms phmaes nf .Im pm... s...II ...,ks ,II ...II.I.....I II.. ..I.I.... am, prcpanng the vnu-rmInIneI-II, .I.I.I.I..,. A.. .I.,I.I..II.., .II .III II.. ...... mrs, .Ind dam-mrIng Ihr ,gym wIII I... a.. ,I.I....I.' ......I ....I .I.,I...u...- ......I 'Ipem 'IIIIIIII w IIIIIII II- hm d.'c.IrmI.I.Is ...If fe.I.II- I III. IIIIIIII .II Ihr -if T Cnc semuzer ara! , .1 by Ihr xcacher In II-Ie uudmx Baking rha bank pm- gnn as dnernxinrd by weekly! quizzes concerning articles published in :he Scholauic magazine. Ollie, who Is in Mr. unuIrd'u l-Iilmty clan, had an av of 97M per ce.-Ir on :hm Inu. ,Ip-Iaed uw. k Approximately sixty nuelenu :oak dn mu and averaged their mm ar 4- ...,I -r .I- -........ n.L.-. ...La any- in a for you :om In our land Youre thankfully, Sefred Seylu. Dear friends: . II- lx.-I... .'.I.I.1l-III .l.rc.IIII'. .hd ndvnlmlxle II.-I-L: In .I.IIIaIng and dII-sexing rhe ,II-I-I.III.I...I..I. Ivo ...o..IIsen .If :III- ...I., .Ind II. IIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIe I'.IrI.IIIs ...'...-s Inc.. .Inv Im..II-III, I4nzcrInInIng ,IIII.IIII...I-...- M.I.fI ard.. Is due nl... I.. Mr lK..IxIwIII L':.I.Il.. .x.lI'I:II-I of rl.. .........-...-.I ..I.I.I...II..-I ....I II.. 4.2 --I.-...I-.III .II III. pmfi III.: sr.-.Inn IIIII. ......I...I, .IIIII II.I.I .I-... 6.IrbcrI look lim I!IIiI.I1vIIII-.I -...'Is In fuur lfenviw .IIII5 I.lIII slmll nw wlxxrix :Irene or IIIII. 5. ...I I..II Ilw I-I-It l:IIclI was cap- II..IrIn.1 llolw lfI'I.-III .II.'he:Irn play- ..I .III.I..,.I.....I II... .I.....I II.. -..I.II.I. .Iprs .II KIIS salem ...II III...III. III... rw.. Iiclds vmuuc and IIIII..I.ev I'l..I..I was nngmg. clancn-Ig, I .I-.IIIII ...II-, IIIIII pun- comedy. Among .I..- IIIIIQIIIIIJIIIK pcrfnrIIII.nces of Ihr .-....Ing wmv: jim C'lIrIsIIc'a mpcrh III.pIIrmII.III.IIIs .II Sophw Tucker and XI j.IlI.m: VIrgIIIIa McClamro.'iI's .i.I!I...I.I II..II.II Ihr III-YK Rancho III.-II... III.I..-.Iv :-km IIII- lovely SIL .cv I-,IIIIIIIQVU rxumlwr. In which the ' -II. .lwssml .rIIIIIrly In blue and I Ip. ...Ing In-.IIIIIfIIIIy: Tom Keyu' ..II...II-I. III..-.Ir..III.I....I. III .I m.ddII-I If.-.I I.-mII.III drcwsmgz ,lun Slxcrrmis Ir..-ll.-I.. .In.rIIIII-n III' jnnmy Durameg and IIII- I'nsrIr.nuI-Ig rhyvl-Im number'- XNl'IIIIs Tie .Ind TII.Is, .I dunca- II..-fIaIIv I vIuIrIIw Barker and Huh Webb had III.: IIIIIN nl' Ihe .II-ImIp.'-Il cl-IIII-act.-rx, I.-I... I.I.I.i .iw .I.I.lII-IIcI- from scam Io ...I.f.I.- I..-.III-IIIIIJ II. IIII- entire can .-III... II...II.gII I..II. I WIIIIIIIII prr- IoI'mIIIIfr-. which seemed almost prev I.-5......I.I If I-on .hd not In Ihr Hullabaloo L... IIIIIIII, I .Irgf you Io arrend xr.. mgln I.II- nn I-Icnsng of fun .smfl en' IIIIIIIIIIIIIQIII Blu-'1'ri's planning February dance Ge: .IIII your Formnls and Iuxedns EI.I.':IIIw III: Blu-TrI'II .Ire I-PQI-Im.-Ing rhI- February F:.IIIIasy, II Formal dan.-I. Sararday, Frhrnary IS. ar the r.I.....I..I TI-.....II, L..-rIII.... ReyII.II.!II Is Ihe general IIIQIIII-.nn IX.. .he .Iflmr and :he has .IIIrI.IIII.cI-.l rhe I'ollnwIng committees: I-I.I....-......I ,II...I. Ms...IS... cha... II..III, wxclm MIIrIlyn Rnllcrcy, Loimmxe liarlfrr, Sue Kilclinr, Cnrnlvn Tudor. linrlmra DIIIIIIII. lvlarjorxfs Arnett and ,Iran llnlmnn. Program Msnlvn Bolxbm, charr- Innn, wnh Nlary Inuire Handy. .laner 'x'oInIg, N.aII.v HIII, ,luanne Kilclma, a.II-..I,. III......, ....II IMI... MI. Quwmn mr... -sI...I... III-I..I...III, III...- I.I...., ...II. Ms... N..I.., v..g..... III...-I, N.sII..I II....I.II, NI.I.,-II.. Mad- .I..., ...... I-I... .:.II..I.... PIII. ,-.IpI-rnIII-II--'M.IrIIvn HIcks. chan'- . wnh Grerclwn Rwe, Judy Mc. .nmcl.. and Manlyn Rurherford. Thr refr.-slImImIs nrc hung. handled .I v..,....... r.4.cI....I....h. Mme... ey-Ineshagen, Nancy Brnmlry, Mari- 'lI..I.lvlI. h'l:Iry Cacherine Cam-r. IIIIIIIIIII, nnd .ln IK-lcQIIinon mn.. AAIIIII., Fmncn MIIler, .md In IJIxoI. .Ire In I-hnrgr of adver- I.-IIIIII Jean ,Im-.rs Is chairman Il-Ie poarer .-IIIIIIIIIIIII-4-. Asaiuing her Sue SIIIIwI-II, Manha Thomas, Him. Normwrue Hall. Jun ludy Rmvr. und Doris Mar- uand, The arrangrmems for rho band are I vnndr Iw Elame Kxlclina. Make it a date- February II -7 . - Hullabaloo February 7 Anderson - dw!! February 12 LII-IcoIn'a hinhday February I2 . .Ka-Chau :pon dance February I4 . ,c.,Valcntino'u Day February 14 . . .... L-opxuporx - risen .... Sxvnxluan Bal! Fab:-nary I5 . . -n-Q 5, ol O Q. u,-E..Wfa5fy' fn.. 3' nr? and 6,4-S0 hours of our big year were ln an eTTorT To cram over 6,480 acTion- packed hours OT liTe aT Kokomo l-ligh School inTo less Than one-TenTh ThaT number of pages, The sTaTT exerTed Themselves To The nTh degree in procuring iusT The righT pic- Tures and iusT The righT copy To preserve Tor- ever ThaT cerTain someThing in Kl-IS ThaT has been, and is . . . The SpiriT oT '47, BuT There is a loT more To The produc- Tion oT This Sargasso Than ThaT. Behind every page you read here are counTless hours oT physical and menTal exerTion sTreTching inTo every day . . . and many nighTs . . . OT The year. Skipping behind The scenes To lasT No- vember when The ediTors benT mysTeriously over sheeTs oT closely guarded paper, and The business managers anxiously scanned sales records, we Tind ThaT Those days were The criTical period oT The Sargasso. Days when a harried expression served as The sure- Tire Trademark oT any and all sTaTT members. One leaT aTTer anoTher was Torn Trom The calendar and The realizaTion TasT came ThaT Time, Tide and prinTing deadlines waiT Tor no man. As The day OT reckoning approach- ed, There emerged, Trom Tormless sTacks oT copy, The near-Tinished producT. Sales ToTals were comTorTably hiTTing The peak and The sTaTT breaThed easily . . . noT wiThouT Tull appreciaTion oT The Tireless eTTorTs puT TorTh by Their silenT parTners, Miss ElizabeTl1 l-landley and Mr. George Dunbar, advisers OT The ediTorial and business divisions, re- specTively. A pair oT TirsT-class workers were Miriam ShowalTer and Bill Underwood, who conTribuTed a lion's share To The publishing CGUS6. P ge 102 Top: EcliTor Ted Teegarden and Business Manager Bill Bugher find ideas for Th s year's dummy. 7o.Iom: Af:ocfaTe EdiTor Nancy Adams and Asso- ciaTe Business Manager Clara Clifford plan pic- Tuses and copy. So There you have iT. JusT as The year- book's namesake, The Sargasso Sea, collecTs debris Trom fXTlanTic shores, so do These one hundred TwenTy-Tour pages conTain The Trag- menTs oT our year, a BIG year . . . IQ47. So leT us presenT you wiTh ThaT greaT year . . . all wrapped up in whaT we hope is a greaT book . . . your I9-47 SARGASSO. N argassoecln between these covers. Upper left Parl of Sales Slaff check cards. Lefl' fo righfz Peggy Fisher, Madonna Gerhar+, Mary Calh- erine Ferry, Mary Helen McEn+ee, Ru+h McKee. Lower left Allan Rayl, Miriam Showalfer, Elaine Kilcline, and Barbara Eades fil picfures and copy Io space. ii lk ii EDITORIAL STAFF Chief Cony Edifor-Miriam Showaller. Feaiure Edilor-Janice Taylor, Joe Berneche, Joan Wagoner, Belle BenneH. Sporfs Edi+or-Ellwood Lewis, Jack Snyder, LyneHe Bearfy, Jim Sheerin. Music Edi+or-Barbara Irby, Joan Morrison. Publicafions Edifor-Barbara Kohn, Beverly Wiebers. Exfra-Curricular Edifor-Barbara Shori, Mary Kohn. Aclivilies Edilor-Marilyn Hiclrs. Senior Aclivilies Edilor-Phyllis Curlee, Mariorfe Hunnes- hagen. Tom Roseberry. Club Edilor-Virginia McClamroch, Jean Holman, Chris Sim- mons, Bob Wilson, Joy Graham. Snapshof Edifor-Carolyn Mohr, Rodney Smi+h, Tom Keyes lphofographersl. Faculfy Edilor-Barbara Eades, Mary Louise Heady, Dick Frefz. Upper righf: Beverly O'Reair slrefches figures for Ihe Sar- qasso. Lower righrz Edilorial Heads, Barbara Kohn, Barbara Shorl, Tom Keys, Virginia Mcclamroch, Rodney Smi+h, Ellwood Lewis, Janice Taylor, Rufh Louise Hedricll, Marilyn Hicks, Barbara Irby. ik il Typisfs-Pal Carrolhers, Marilyn Richey, Ramona Crodcly, Rulh McKee, lola Loop, Phyllis Curlee. BUSINESS STAFF Sales Manager--Allen Rayl. Produclion Manager-Bill Underwood. Dis+ribuI'ion Manager-Norman Kerr. Assisfanf Dislribulion Manager-Jacqueline Richcreelx. P'C'liUI'6 Slalf-Joanne Wilfse, Pai Clarlr. Posler S+a'Ff-Chief: Elaine Kilcline, Deborah Dieden, Elizabefh Jusfice. Colleclors- Belly Chrislopher, Barbara Bagwell, Mary Cafherine Ferry, Peggy Fisher, Ofhella Cowgill, Rufh McKee, Bonila Hullin- ger, Madonna Gerharf, Barbara Barfhelemy, Opal Rose- meyer, Chrislina Iriclr, Marilyn Barfhelemy, Marilyn Newby, Dave Coady, Richard Hollingsworfh, Frances McClain, Jim Shearer, Mary Helen McEn+ee, Karlene Jacobs, Joan Bowen, Elzabefh Jusfice, Barbara Carr, Marilyn Richey, Virginia Herr, Marjorie Herr, Louise Brown. Page 103 Wileill never lorgel the lfliglljf ol our Thal Girl Palsy is quile a gal. To explain lhis ralher slrilcing slalemenl, we reler you lo lhe Senior Class Play under lhe direclion ol Miss Lililh Parlow. The comecly in lhree acls lells lhe slory ol Palsy, an orphan who comes lo live al Bob: I'II always need you, Palsy. , ,Q l lhe big mansion ol an English lamily, lhe Warrens. Allhough she is nol welcomed by lhe son and claughler ol Mr. and Mrs. War- ren during lhe lirsl lew vveelcs ol her slay, Palsy linally gains lhe conliolence ol each one and proves hersell worlhy ol being a member ol lhe lamily, allhough she has been lrealed as a servanl by all excepl Bob and Mrs. Warren, who have lailh in her. This lailh is shown by lhe allenlion and lessons in grammar lhey give Palsy as she slays al Pg 4 Lower lell: Mrs. Warren: l'm going lo adopl lhis girl Palsy. Lower righl: Zen ze lellairs are all zare? big dalze with WTl1aJc Girl Patsy? lhe Vlfarren mansion. The climax ol lhe play comes when she shows her apprecialion ol lhe confidence placed in her by gellinq rid ol a blackmailer lor Julia, and inspiring Bob lo make somelhing ol his lislless social lile. The play ends happily as Bob succeeds in winning her love and linally persuades her lo marry him. Through all lhe hard worlc and slruqgles, lhe casl lurned oul one ol lhe mosl exciling and lascinaling plays ol lhe year. Palsy: l'm hungry. l.el's eal. Mrs. Warren Miss Harper Professor Powers Bob Warren Julia Warren Denny Palsy Susie Mr. Warren Fred Phillip Greer Violel Manners CAST Jo McQuislon Shirley Henricks Tom Keyes Wayne Tash Belly Lou Highl Bob Webb Rosalie Baum Marilyn Rose Jim Beck Norman Kerr ,, Jim Sheerin . Nancy Adams Bob: Weill - l'll see you laler, Susie. Bob: l'll lake care ol lhal, lalher. Page 105 Page IO6 Page IO7 T Top Leffz AThleTic Supervisor Chesfer Hill counfs Tourney TickeTS. Top RighT: Charles Baer and Ellwood Lewis, sTudenT basleTball managers, and Rolserf Hudelson and RoberT Cassis, sTudenT TooTball managers compare problems. BoTTom: Yell leaders Nance Fridlin, Tom Noble, Doris Hegwood and Roland Ahlbrand lead The locomo- Hvef Aluove OIC SOHIC ICGSOHS YV 'ly OUI' IS ReTurning Trom The army lasT year To re- sume his duTies as f-XThleTic Supervisor oT Kokomo High School, Mr. ChesTer l-lill has direcTed The sporTing TorTunes oT KT-TS in his Typically genial . . . and successTul . . manner. Playing no TavoriTe in The sporTing scene. The masTerTul aggregaTions represenTing Ko- komo have subdued Their opposiTion wiTh a pleasing amounT or regulariTy. All in all, The aThleTics oT This school owe a loT To Mr. l-lill. ge 108 WheTher TasTing The sweeT TruiTs oT vic- Tory or The biTTer gall oT deTeaT, The ever- presenT and always-needed Team managers are consTanTly on The iob. To Them goes hearTy praise Tor a iolo well done. And here you have The cusTodians oT The KaTs Meows in Tull glory as They, plus Their loyal vocal cords, lead The way in our embaTTled and Trenzied crys oT . . . Yea WildcaTsl and blue waved high on 'clue gridiron ll' really hils lhe spol. By lhis, we mean, ol course, lhe new loolball scoreboard pre- senled lo Kokomo l-ligh School by Jrhe Loyal Order of Jrhe Moose. The new eleclrric scorer is cerlainly a vasl improvemenl over lhe old board. So wilhoul being al all lrile, we can pull an old one our ol lhe bag and say sincerely, Thanks a lol . . . il's iusl whal we needed. To such an alhlelic conscious school as KHS, no gill could be more apprecialed . . . and we assure you il' is. Picking up where he lell oil laslr season, Coach Raymond lolherwise lcnown as 'l'ubby l Trobaugh Jrurned loose upon Jrhe gridiron an aggregalion lhal lhrew much fear . . . and many a block . . . inlo 'rhe opposing loolball squads. Operaling oil lhe now widespread il'- lormalion, lhe Wildcals cul six nolches inlo lheir viclory bell while dropping only lhree conlesls. lAnd lhose were lo very slill op- posil'ion.l FOOTBALL Baclr Row: lLeff fo Righrl Davis Maudlin, Bill Snow, John Phelps, Bill Fox, Dan Marlin. Sixlh Row: William Powell, Cliflon DeWiH', Roberl' Pickering, James Hall, Jack Smi+h, Mark Ormsby, Bill Moberly, Joe Lear. Fifrh Row: Don Buflon, Marlr Garrfson, Paul Ashba, Leon Hale, Richard Farmer, Milfon Wood, Joe Slrinner, Rich- ard Rayl, Diclr Logan, Richard Clesrer. Fourlh Row: Verlin Bowland, Tom Lanfz, Jay Hamler, Joe Young, Wayne Sprinkle, Russell Burler, Waller Finney, Corwin Huslon, Hank Lewis, Bob Hess, Don Harris, Alden Jahnlre. Third Row: Coach Tuffy Laymon, Don Whife, Paul Raymon, Gene Cole, Floyd Granf, Bob Lee, Jack Ellis, Bill Hayes, Bill Reason, Bob Swing, Harry Webb, Bill Mills, Coach Forresl' Roe. Second Row: Coach Tubby Trobaugh, Jay Reed, Bill Graves, Bob Webb, Lowell Ellabarger, Nelson Babb, Charles Sosbe, Carl Johnson, Tom Lear, Rex Kellar, Bill Under- wood, Joe PlaH. Fronl Row: Gene Nielancler, Jim While, Richard Murphy, Dave Cowell, Paul lmlay, Jack Weaver, Bill Parker, John Plafl, Bob Wilson, Joe Smifh, Jim Sheerin. Pag e 109 Upper leTT: Jim Sheerin lugging The pigskin. Lower lelfz Joe Smifh Talres The snapbaclr from cenfer Dave Cowell. The Line: Paul Raymon, Nelson Babb, WalTer Finney, William Graves, Charles Sosbe. in The Canlpaigu of 'LL Tearing The lid oTT The season on Their own naTive soil, ye olde home Team laid a 3l-I3 seTbaclc in Wabash's unhappy lap. Par- lcer, Wilson, Jones and PlaTT Took Turns punching The goal-line cash regisTer To ring up an impressive vicTory Tor The number one game on The schedule. Marion was nexT on The lisT oT early suc- cesses. Under ideal weaTher condiTions, The Bud Jones snags a pass. Hi? +haT line, men! Joe PlaTT crashes Through The line. Prachce is over! as our eleven submerged six opponents. K ggridders racked up a pleasing Tally oT 26-I9 To cuT The G-ianTs down To Their size. Sheerin, Joe PlaTT, Parker, and SmiTh Torced Their way inTo The enemy end zone Tor Koko- mo's Tour 6-poinTers. Parker and SmiTh crossed The border Tor The Two Touchdowns ThaT puT Kokomo on Top oT a I2-6 counT when The KaTs meT and Tam- ed The Peru Tigers in The Third TilT oT' The sea- son. Cur gridironers meT Their WaTerloo aT LaTayeTTe when The JeTT Broncos puT Them on The shelT To The Tune oT 32-6. l.iTTle Joe PlaTT carried The pigskin across Tor our only marker oT The game. Kl-lS enTered The crediT side oT The led- ger again The Tollowing week by dishing ouT a 20-7 win To an Elwood eleven, who seemed To have losT Their appeTiTe. SmiTh Tagged home Twice and Joe PlaTT once To subdue The ElwoodiTes. The KaTs commemoraTed The TradiTional Logan-Kokomo rivalry by crushing The Ber- ries inTo sour wine by a counT oT 26-I9 To make The TenTh consecuTive year The Kl-lS grid squads have beaTen The Logan SporTs. Our red and blue cheTs boiled The Frank- TorT l-loT Dogs down To a crisp by score oT I8-7 as John PlaTT broughT home The bacon Twice and SmiTh once Tor The vicTorious Kokomo pigskin crew. Kokomo bowed deTiniTely. buT very graceTully To The mighT oT The Muncie Bear- caTs when ThaT ouTTiT gave us a TirsT class shoving around oT 38-0 as The KaTs Tound diTTiculTy in peneTraTing The B'caTs Torward wall. MooseharT, The lasT iTem on The '46 menus, was served up Too hoT To handle as Their power-laden aggregaTion Took The KaT- men Tor a 47-6 buggy ride. Closing ouT The campaign in deTeaT was overshadowed by The TacT ThaT The KaTs ToughT cleanly down To The lasT diTch. Pag III Basketball, a la Koleomo, Page 112 N , in oe ordan broadcasfs la C.rcle. T y J J P Y bv Pl Y .HN 'x I raig lumps for ihe bas Coach Ralph King presenled lhe Basker- ball Kals as exhibir K To leslify To Jrhe lac? fha? lhey were one of rhe iigh+inis+ ourfirs mixed up in Jrhe Hoosier Madness. Afrer showing Jrhe way in Jrhe N. C. C. for Jrwo years, Mr. King demonsrralred he is sfill King- pin when ir comes To hardwood slraregy by unleashing a guinrer lhal, while nor winning all encounlers, was long on rhe mosl imporr- ani ingredienr of all . . . sporrsmanship. lnvading Jrhe Wabash Gym ro lill' rhe lid on lhe '46-'47 campaign Jrhe Kafs scalped 'rhe Apaches 52-28 +o wrap up an opening vicrory. Bumping info Frankfort lhe K-men dis- covered Thar l-log Dogs are nor served like pink rea, as lhey wound up wirh Jrhe musrard on lop and in a pickle, 29-27. FL Wayne came ro Town and even wifh a nel warming shown by Bones Wagner, rhe Kars were blinded in Jrhe las? 30 seconds, 38-36. BASKETBALL TEAM Back Row: lLefT To RighTl Coach Ralph King, Coach Russell BraTTon. Third Row: Dean Timmons, Bob Williams, Bob Marple, Don WhiTe, Richard Farmer, Paul CaTon, Floyd GranT, William Lawson. Second Row: Joe PlaTT, Glenn Umbarger, John Ellers, Phil BrasIreTT, Leonard Herr, Bob Jacobs, Boi: Longshore. FronT Row: Jack Snyder, John PIaTT, Ray Eslcridge, Tom Craig, Bud Jones, Bill Wagner, Gene Wagner, Barney PeTTy. was Served up l1oT lay our harclwoocl To regain Their sTride aTTer Two consecu- Tive manhandlings, The Iurching KaTs preyed upon The unluclcy Sheridan Nighhawks, clip- ping Their Tail TeaThers, 50-29. Up sTepped Marion and The K-Krew was rudely dumped, 40-36. A GianT named Weagley wiggled in I8 poinTs To cop The baTTIe royal. The LaTayeTTe Broncs rode inTo Town and when The rodeo ended, The BasIcaTs had been buclced bl-39 by a JeTT neT bIisTering cam- paign. Traveling Marion's way Tor a reTurn en- gagemenT, The King QuinTeT derailed The GianT's N. C. C. express, 30-28, wiTh an iron man combinaTion ThaT displayed oTTensive perTecTion. WiTh The KaTeam s+ilI roaring defense, The Rossville I-IorneTs buzzed inTo Town, To be silenced, 50-34, as Johnny PIaTT persecuT- ed The scorelceeper wiTh I6 poinTs. Drawing The Logan Berries Tor The aTTer- noon TiIT, in The New Year's Tourney, The Red and Blue harvesTed a 36-2I vicTory To sTarT I947 oTT righT. Anclerson's Indians were clawed in The Tinale, 33-27, and The New Year's crown was ours. Jones, Gene Wagner and PeTTy played Themselves onTo The all-Tourney Team. Fog 113 l3aSlQeTeers as They hroughjc home Kolcomo's Kagers sTuclc a pin inTo The highly raTed Muncie B'CaTs To The sweeT Tune oT 42-39 To conTinue down The paTh oT conguesT. A Trip To New CasTle . . . and The Tro- ian horse galloped high as iT puT a sTop To our ways wiTh a 34-22 slapback. Bones Wagner and Tom Craig led The Kl-TS quinTeT in singing GeT Thee Behind Me, SaTan, as They deTlaTed The TipTon Devils, 38-3I. Our WildcaT demoliTion crew pluclced The Logan SporTs Tor The second Time wiTh a sum ToTal oT 36 Tor Kolcomo and 32 Tor Logan. l-loT Dogs and Kold KaTs Told The sTory as The FranlcTorT Tive gave The Kingsmen a singeing wiTh The scoreboard reading 33-32 againsT Kl-lS as The smolce rolled away. Our sToclc dropped a poinT in The N. C. C. marl4eT when a power-laden aggregaTion down Richmond way puT us ouT in The cold, 44-29. Our Kagers baclced The Peru Tigers inTo a Corner and Tamed Them wiTh The Tally sheeT showing a 36-20 vicTory Tor The Kolcomoans when The gun sounded. Throwing away Their peaeepipes The KaTs aTTaclced The Anderson Indians who were Tinally vanquished 44-42 as The sound oT The shooTing died ouT. LeTT: Richmond and Kokomo Captains discuss The rules wiTh The referees. Right Richmond males a free T P g II4 The New Yearis Championship Trophy. LeTT: Barney PeTTy receives The opponenT's shoT. Righh The crowd cheers as KHS wins. Along came The Logan Berries wiTh blood in Their eye and KT-TS was knocked To The hardwood and was down Tor The counT, 37-32. Wrapping up The 46-47 campaign wiTh an excursion To Tech oT Indianapolis, The KaTmen were given The brush-oTT wiTh 42-36 deTeaT. NOT allowing The Tech Green Wave To dampen Their spiriTs, The KT-T5 TournamenT Special plunged inTo The TirsT game oT The SecTionals wiTh Jackson and eTTicienTly dis- posed oT Them wiTh a 52-2I spanking. Ervin sTepped inTo The picTure Tor The nexT exchange oT baskeTs, and The BaskaTs senT Them home wiTh a 60-32 deTlaTion To any OT Their possible championship hopes. From There The KaTs puT The Tinishing Touches on Union in The Tinal game, 5l-34, and They had The 5ecTional all wrapped in red and blue ribbon. ln The opening TilT oT The regionals, The Kokomo neTmen pushed TipTon aside wiTh a healThy 45-39 knockouT pill. Only Two poinTs . . . buT They were enough To block The KI-TS baskeTeers paTh To The STaTe as Marion adminisTered a 37-35 re-- pulsing To deliver The 46-47 season C. 0. D. To The moThballs. Peg H5 01 UNO l 0 TRACK spun Back Row: iLefl lo Righll John Phelps, Joe Smilh, Bill Law- Waller Cross. son, Bill Bufium, Millon Wood, Phil Braslrell, Bill Gloye, Ray Davis, Dan Moose, Bill Milligan. Third Row: Joe Drago, Richard Bowlin , Wilbur Slabaugh. 9 Don Bullon, Richard Farmer, Richard Francais, Don Rid- lin, Russell Ada r, John McClinlicl:, Billy Giles, Coach The lllinly-claols wer Opening lhe '46 campaign, Coach Wal- ler Cross' Cinderlcals mel Marion al Kaulz Field on April l2 and were delealed in lheir lirsl meel ol lhe season. John Plall was lhe slar Kal lor lhe allernoon, winning one lirsl and lhree seconds while Bob Marple, Bones Wagner, and Barney Pelly were blue ribbon winners. Peru was nexl on lhe Kal's lisl and lor a while il looked as lhough our cindermen mighl luck a viclory under lheir bells as Bob Marple, Joe Conwell, John Plall, Bones Wagner, Wendell Maupin, and Barney Pelly scored lirsl places, bul lale was cruel and Peru won, 59lf2 lo 49lf2. ln lheir lasl invasion ol enemy lerrilory, lhe Kals ran al Tech on April 19. Bolh lhe A and B leams compeled on lhe large Tech lield, bul lheir ellorls were in vain as neilh- er leam was viclorious. Page 116 Second Row: Bob Wilson, Leroy Fivecoale, Ben Noble, Charles Maple, Ray Eskridge, Bud Jones, Harry Webb. Glenn Slores, Bill Hayes, Mark Garrison, Bob Marlin. Fronl Row: Job Jackson, Don While, John Morgan, Bob Marple, Wendell Maupin, Jack Ellis, Barney Pelly. e oll lo llle races, Cn April 27, Muncie held lheir annual Relays lhe lhe Cinder-Kals placing Sixlh in lhe evenl. Kolcomo's lraclc . . . and Beauly . . . en- lhusiasls chose Marlha Smilh as lhe lirsl queen ever lo reign over lhe lamous Kolmo- mo Relays, while lhe Kl-lS cinder squad carv- ed lhemselves lhe sixlh nolch in lhe class A scoring column. ln lhe Conference Meel on May IO, Ko- laomo lied wilh Franlclorl lor sevenlh place. Kokomo scored IQW3 poinls lo place second in lhe Seclional meel, being ouldis- lanced only by a powerlul Anderson leam. The Kals senl lhree men lo lhe Slale meel: Joe Conwell, Barney Pelly, and Bob Marple. G -4. I- fl' S b all p Upper Righl: Perieclion on fhe pole vaull. Upper Le : ome rea Lower Leila Up and over lhe high hurdles. Lower Righiz Anolher Kolromo Relays winner honored. anal the cross Country looys were, too. Over hill, over dale lravelecl lh 3 cross counlry iraclc- men as lhey squeezed oul Wabash i w i c e wilh ielerilical scores oi 28-27.. They were leli behind by Marion and Frankfort how- ever, 3 I-24 and 36-I9, respeciively. Page 117 CROSS COUNTRY BOYS-Baclr Row: Slanley Lamb, William Gloye, Mari: Ga F 'f Row: Billy Milligan, Roy F.vecoa+e, William L 4,015 05,0 i .503 D510 6 0K0 is l?Q ,P Wi fe wir AGK UMA , A ivy ' QKUQ is G, 0 Beck Row: Dale Godlove, Bill Parker, Jack Kendall, John Plafl, Charles Killings, Gene Nielander, Lloyd Dillman, and Coach William SmiTh. Middle Row: Joe Conwell, Tom Lear, Jerry Richeson, Bob Bennefl, Bob Gallion, Richard Marlin, and Charles Sosbe. Fronf Row: Herman Parker, Ed Wilson, Dick Meyers, Mark Ormsby, and Bill Powell. W e were on The ball 1I1 baseball and golf, BASEBALL Shoving QTT inTo Their second baseball season since iTs resumpTion lasT year, The Kl-IS nine baTTled Through a rugged season wiTh Mr. Bill SmiTh aT Their helm. Opening The campaign, The KaTs barged inTo Muncie . . . and deTeaT, in The TirsT TilT of a double header when The B'CaTs squeezed Them ouT, 3-2. The K-nine recap- Tured The second game by a 6-2 Tally. LogansporT was nexT. ResulT: Kl-lS 6, Ll-lS 0. Marion sTepped up The following week To be slapped back, I0-7. A Top-noTch Jeff oi LaTayeTTe aggrega- Tion seTTled The Kokomo hash wi+h a chilling 3-2 seTback. Tech oT Indianapolis came up and Kokomo wenT down To The sad Tune oT 4-0. Bouncing back wiTh a ConquisTador aT- TiTude, The KaT Team cooled oTT The Frank- TorT l-loTdogs, 9-2, and showed ThaT They Pg ll8 were King oT diamonds by bucking The LafayeTTe Broncos, 6-2. New Casfle was diTToed wiTh a I0-8 de- TeaT hung on Them by The K-squad who wenT on To close ouT The season by cuTTing The Marion GianTs down, 5-l . I GOLF Coach Ralph King and his golTers Toured The Tairways successfully as They blasTed our Tive wins and scuTTled only Two in seven Times ouT. LogansporT surrendered Two maTches To our linksmen, who in Turn were prompTly nudged ouT oT The win column by Anderson and Tech of Indianapolis in a vicious Triangle meeT. Kokomo's squad of Junior l-lolT, Marshall Clark, Louis STouT, John Mason, Don Craig, and Bob Frank ouTpoinTed Anderson The Tol- lowing week and conquered Marion Twice, while l-lolT grabbed Third medalisT honors in The ConTerence meeT. but we also had athletics, feminine style. STricTly Tor girls inTeresTed in aThleTics, The Girls' AThleTic AssociaTion is sponsored by Miss Miriam Danner, physical educaTion insTrucTor. Trying To develop noT only skill in vari- ous sporTs, buT also good sporTsmanship and habiTs oT Tair play, This high school's GAA Tollows The regulaTions oT The Indiana League oT l-ligh School Girls AThleTic AssociaTion. OTTicers oT The GAA This year were Bar- bara Ellis, presidenTg Wilma Gollner, vice- presidenTq Jenice Pickering, secreTary, and Ruirh Emery, Treasurer. During The school year, The girls enioyecl parTicipaTing in Tield acTiviTies, Track, Tumb- ling, dancing, bowling, deck Tennis, and bas- keTball. In True Hoosier Tashion, baskeTball ranked Tops in populariTy. AThleTic awards in GAA are based on a poinT sysTemg members receive 5 To IO poinTs Tor each skill and wriTTen TesT passed. The awards include an emblem, requiring l5O poinTs, The K , requiring 250 poinTs, and The STaTe Award, won by 350 poinTs. The seven GAA girls who have won a K are Sadie Rody, Barbara Ellis, Jenice Picker- ing, Wilma Gollner, RuTh Emery, Yvonne Ed- wards and Olive SmiTh. Sadie Rody, Exie Allen, and Barbara Ellis earned STaTe Awards. Adding a liTTle social liTe To Their aThleTic acTiviTies, The girls had Tun holding a candy raTTle and skaTing parTy. Two ouTsTanding evenTs in The girls' social program were The Alumni BanqueT held in February and The lvloTher-DaughTer BanqueT held in May. G. A. A. Back Row: llefT To righfl Pairicia Young, Marjorie Spicer, Annabelle Mugg, Pai Calveard, and Olive Rae Smifh. Second Row: Suzanne Rea, Wilma Gollner, Be'Hy Earlywine, Rufh Emery. Firsf Row: Barbara Ellis, Jenice Pickering, BeTTy Blessing. ...Mawr-an-1n m -.r-1 AND A GREAT YEAR ENDS G Qu LL All? gCROLL '7!mnb1z'a... PLA TES . . . INDIANAPOLIS ENGRAVING COMPANY Indianapolis, Indiana PRINTING . . . HUMPHREY PRINTING COMPANY Kokomo, Indiana PHOTOS . . . ADAMSSTUDIO Kokomo, Indiana igxglklsllulsqi 'IEE ,iv Q EE COVER . . . ff-Vassocww cRAF1co YEARBOOK covens Chicago, Illinois Page I2l Page 122 WGIIIIGH1GH1 er our rien S ARMSTRONG-LANDON COMPANY 101 Wesf Sycamore Slreef BECKLEY TYPEWRITER COMPANY 306 Norfh Main Sfreef DR. J. D. BOUGHMAN 322 Armsfrong-Landon Building W. DAN BRETZ 1041- Wesf Mulberry Sheef ROGER BRINEY, Jewelry and Gifis 215 Norflr Main Sfreef CARL-ANN SHOP 204 Norflr Main Sfreei CENTRAL RADIO SERVICE 219 Wesf Jackson Sfreef DR. J. E. CHANCELLOR 420 Armsfrong-Landon Building CITY FRUIT STORE 200 Wexf Superior Sfreef DR. F. O. CLIFFORD 605 Union Bank Building DR. R. E. CRAIG 610 Armsfrong-Landon Building DUKE RESTAURANT 112 Easf Sycamore Sfreef EBY'S SHOE STORE 218 Norflr Main Sfreef EHRHARDT DRUG COMPANY 314 Norfh Main Sireei DR. PAUL W. FERRY 406 Union Bank Building FIRST NATIONAL BANK 325 Norfll Main Sfreef FRITCHEY NASH SALES 116 Norfh Union Slreef GALBREATH 8: STEWART, Men's Wear 219 Norfh Main Sfreef GERHART DRUG STORE 128 Wesf Walnuf Sfreef GISMO RESTAURANT 221 Norfh Buckeye Sfreef DR. R. P. GOOD 308 Armsfrong-Landon Building DR. OTIS R. HALE 106 Souflr Main Sfreef DR. A. L. HARTER 602 Union Bank Building RADIO STATION WKMO College Building, Norfh DR. W. H. HUTTO 408 Arms1rong+Lundon Building KOKOMO CAFE 211 Norfh Buckeye Sfreef K 8: S DEPARTMENT STORE 112-116 Souflv Main Sfreef KOKOMO TRIBUNE 300 Norfh Union Sfreef LAMBERSON'S DO-NUT SHOP 113 Soufh Buckeye Sfreef LA MODE SHOP 208 Norfh Main Sfreef MADDOX FINANCE CORPORATION 121i Wesf Mulberry Sfreef JACK MAHER 8: SON, Men's Wear 210 Narlll Main Sfreef DR. C. T. MAYFIELD 306 Armsfrong-Landon Building DR. F. ETHEL MOREHEAD 502 Armsirong-Landon Building DR. H. E. MOSS 512 Armsfrong-Landon Building OLSEN AND EBANN 216 Norfh Main Sfreef PALMBLADE'S 212 Norfh Main Sfreef J. C. PENNEY COMPANY 100 Norfh Main Sfreef RED TOP CABS 112 Soufh Buckeye Sfreef H. J. SCHRADER AND COMPANY 125 Easf Walnuf Sfreef SCHWARTZ BROTHERS REAL ESTATE COMPANY 113 Wesf Mulberry Sireef DR. F. C. SCHWARTZ 518 Armsfrong-Landon Building SCHWENGER'S BAKERY 107 Norfll Union Sfreef SHIRLEY'S HOME FURNISHINGS 1101 Norfh Washingfon Sfreef DR. E. H. SHOWALTER 308 Union Bank Building SNEPP AND FAGER 119 Easf Walnuf Sfreef WILLIAM H. TURNER COMPANY 116 Wesf Walnuf Sfreef Main Sheer an ..-. ..rvf,m :umm pf: ' ,,a-v..-Huw. 4.p:1..g,Muu.n: W-1: -.1 r x..:- . X, a.uA-,W V . , . mu-V f - W .,. J-..,4. 'num , .n..-u,, c.'1.uuu:.:.-Lu-w..1-1:1 mmm. .iii '. . , Hi. Wg- ,-:Q H i , i' N -3' 't ' ,J . '-.. , Q, . ,J ,Cyl-,y f' v 'ji 1 -i Rf-M rw A I 3 I a 1 I s 3 5 3 I 5 5 4 I i ! . 1 Q


Suggestions in the Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) collection:

Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Kokomo High School - Sargasso Yearbook (Kokomo, IN) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950


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